No, "chaste" and "chased" are not homophones. "Chaste" means abstaining from extramarital, or all, sexual intercourse, while "chased" means having been pursued by someone or something.
The homophone for chased is "chaste", meaning pure.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
The homophone for "hymn" is "him."
The homophone of farther is father.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
The homophone for chased is "chaste", meaning pure.
Chase
It's pronounced the same way as chased.
The proper word is "Chaste". It means to be pure, clean, retain virginity, avoid sexual contact.
its belonging to it The dog chased its tail. it's short for it is It's time to feed the dog.
The spelling "shoed" means wearing shoes (humans, horses). The homophone "shooed" means chased away.
When, after listening to the young women and the other boys flirting at the bazaar, the narrator realizes that women, especially his idealized Enamorata, are more chased than chaste.
not chaste
In pronunciation, there are two words that sound alike : CHASED (verb) - past tense of the verb ''to chase'' CHASTE (adjective) - virginal, or austere
It is important for nuns to be chaste.
Aymar Chaste died in 1603.
sierra cooperson is a very chaste person.