The word "caught" is pronounced cawt in the US and has no homophone (sound-alike word).
However, in the UK and Australia, the words caught and court are pronounced similarly (kôt and kôrt) with the AU and OU virtually the same and the R not distinct. In the US, court is usually pronounced (kort).
The word seemed (appeared to be) has a homophone (sound-alike word) seamed (fabric having seams).
There are three ways which is too, to, and two which is called a homophone.
The likely word in "concurred" (agreed).The similar word conquered means defeated. It has a homophone (sound alike word) concord, meaning agreement.
That is the correct spelling of the noun cot, meaning a small, short, or temporary bed.It is a near-homophone for the verb caught (cawt - past tense of to catch).
The word that has the same sound as "ball" is "bawl" (to cry). (see related homophone link)
The word is spelt "homophone".
"A contextual spell checker can sometimes find the misuse of a properly spelled homophone." "Using a word that is a homophone of another can sometimes lead to misunderstanding in conversation."
Synonyms of "trapped" or "captured" could include ensnared, confined, or incarcerated. A homophone of "trapped" could be wrapped.
It is 'caught'.
The word seemed (appeared to be) has a homophone (sound-alike word) seamed (fabric having seams).
The homophone for "goods" is "good" - spelled g-o-o-d.
The spelling "no" means negative, or none. The homophone (sound-alike word) is "know" meaning to have facts or recognize someone.
A homophone for "captured" is "raptured."
There are three ways which is too, to, and two which is called a homophone.
A homophone is a word spelt differently which sounds the same (i.e which and witch / where and wear / through and threw) and I can't think of - and don't there IS - a word that is trulyhomophonic to 'off'. A common mistake is to miss the final 'f' to spell 'of' instead. Is it definitely a homophone you want?
The likely word is "caught" (past tense of catch).
That is the correct spelling of the word "righting" (placing upright, as with a capsized ship). The homophone (sound-alike word) is "writing" or making written text.