yes The team hoped for a play-off berth. In the sentence above, berth means an opportunity to play in a tournament or cometition. A place to sleep in a ship or train is also called a berth. Bethany was given the upper berth the night we traveled by train through the Alps.
No, "birth" does not have a homophone in English.
A homophone for birth is "berth."
A homophone for berth is birth.
I do not think there is any homophone for the word, "fly".
A homophone for challenge is challange - where the 'n' is mistakenly added.
cheque
A homophone for birth is "berth."
A homophone for berth is birth.
birth, berth
The homophone of snack is a word that sounds the same but has a different meaning or spelling, such as "snack" (food) and "snag" (obstacle).
I do not think there is any homophone for the word, "fly".
birth, berth
no it does not have any
Not An E? Knot Any?
A homophone for challenge is challange - where the 'n' is mistakenly added.
cheque
The homophone for anyone is any one. "Anyone" refers to any person, while "any one" refers to a specific individual out of a group.
In the American dialect, ant is the homophone for aunt. Everywhere else, there isn't any homophone for aunt.. The homonym only exists in Americanized accents.