homonyms
"Due" and "Dew" are homonyms of "do."
Ear and year are homophones, meaning they are pronounced the same but have different meanings and spellings.
Homophones and homonyms are not considered language techniques. They refer to words that sound alike but have different meanings (homophones) or words that are spelled the same but have different meanings (homonyms). These are more characteristics of language rather than deliberate techniques used in writing or speech.
The homonym for which is witch.
Ear and year are homophones, meaning they are pronounced the same but have different meanings and spellings.
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homonyms
Homonyms are classified into two main categories: homophones, which are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings (e.g., "two," "to," "too"); and homographs, which are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings and pronunciations (e.g., "bow" as in bow and arrow, and "bow" as in take a bow).
These are homonyms or homophones.
Homophones and homographs.
"Due" and "Dew" are homonyms of "do."
yes stile and style is homophones
The homonym for "watt" is "what." In speech, the words "watt" and "what" sound the same but have different meanings.
The homonym for which is witch.
Homonyms of "a flat land" are "a flat hand" and "a flat, bland" while homophones are "a flatter land" and "a flatly and." For "a joiner's tool," homonyms include "a joyous fool" and "a joiners too" while homophones include "a joiner stool" and "a joiners' duel."
Words that sound the same are called homophones. Examples of homophones : bear-bare, two-too, tea-tee. ---- Words that are spelled and pronounced the same, but have different meanings, are called homonyms. Examples of homonyms : left (past tense of leave, or a direction), bear (carry, or the animal) All homonyms are homophones but, as shown, not all homophones are homonyms.