give me example of same pronounce but different meaning
Sure! A common example is "bat," which can refer to a flying mammal or a piece of sports equipment used in Baseball.
A word that has the same meaning but is spelled differently is "color" (American English) and "colour" (British English). Both words refer to the same concept of the visual appearance resulting from the way an object reflects or emits light.
Homonyms are words that have the same spelling and pronunciation but different meanings. An example of a homonym is "bat," which can refer to a flying mammal or a piece of sports equipment used in baseball.
An example of a homophone is "pair" and "pear." These words sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
Sure! "Alas" is an example of a vocable. It is a single word that expresses a feeling or emotion without having a specific meaning on its own.
A suffix is added to the end of a word to alter its meaning or create a new word.
I would give it an obscure name that no one living in the UK/USA could pronounce, meaning they'd need to change the name to something different. Otherwise, give it your name + a normalic ending, -dium as an example.
A word that has the same meaning but is spelled differently is "color" (American English) and "colour" (British English). Both words refer to the same concept of the visual appearance resulting from the way an object reflects or emits light.
It is a word with same pronunciation's but different spelling and meaning .example:pear-pair
what is meaning of bread
Michael Jackson was a massive pop success. Jupiter is the most massive planet. (scientific)
Definition, (n) A description of the meaning of a word. That was an example.
Unclasffied mails
night/knight
tang ina mo
-ly. A suffix is an ending that can be tacked onto a word to give it a different meaning or make it a different part of speech. For example, -ly turns "Direct" from an adjective (in this case), into an adverb.
give me an example of classification of tour guide
properties of addition with example