band, banned
troop, troupe
herd, heard
guild, gild
knot, not
Yes, the homophone for "group" is "grope."
Forest (a group of trees & Forrest (a persons name) constitute a homophone
The homophone of "banned" is "band." This means a group of musicians or a strip of material used to tie or wrap something.
The homophone for anyone is any one. "Anyone" refers to any person, while "any one" refers to a specific individual out of a group.
She joined a support group for dieters who need help losing weight. After such a cold winter, we can't wait for spring.
To "peer" can mean to look at something, or a "peer" can be someone of equal standing such as age group, social standing.
herd, heard
A group of fish = a school of fish
Forest (a group of trees & Forrest (a persons name) constitute a homophone
group of cows = herd listened = heard
The homophone of "banned" is "band." This means a group of musicians or a strip of material used to tie or wrap something.
The correct homophone is "their." It is used to show possession or ownership by a group of people. For example, "Their house is beautiful."
The word bear is a homophone for bare.In a way, your question is a sentence that uses the actual word "homophone," but have a look at this dictionary definition: noun - one of a group of words pronounced in the same way but differing in meaning or spelling or both, as for example bear and bare.
The homophone of farther is father.
The homophone for "to" is "too" or "two".
The homophone for "meant" is "mint".
no there is not a homophone
The homophone is bee.