homophone
"Eight" and "ate" are homophones, meaning they sound the same but have different meanings. "Eight" denotes the number 8, while "ate" is the past tense of the verb "eat."
The homophone for "eight" is "ate."
'Eight' is a homophone of 'ate'.
eight
"real" is not a homophone of either "eight" or "ate." It doesn't sound anything like them.
Yes, the word "ate" contains a long vowel sound. The 'a' in 'ate' is pronounced with a long 'A' sound, as in "ape" or "bake."
'Eight' is a homophone of 'ate'.
The homophone for "eight" is "ate."
eight
A homophone for "number" is "nun-ber."
ate and eight
whole, eight
eight, ate
"real" is not a homophone of either "eight" or "ate." It doesn't sound anything like them.
eight, ate
dined = ate number = eight
Yes, the word "ate" contains a long vowel sound. The 'a' in 'ate' is pronounced with a long 'A' sound, as in "ape" or "bake."
We ate at eight. I ate eight mushrooms. Eight people sat at the table and ate dinner.