Some examples of homophones are "their," "there," and "they're"; "two," "too," and "to"; and "right" and "write." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
"bare" and "bear" "to" and "too" "pair" and "pear"
The homophone for days is "daze." Examples: After being slammed to the ground, the quarterback seemed to be in a daze. Some cold medications leave me feeling dazed and tired.
The homophone for hole is whole. Examples: Did you eat the whole pie? The dog dug a hole in the ground.
A homophone for "hyum" could be "hum," which sounds the same but is spelled differently.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
"bare" and "bear" "to" and "too" "pair" and "pear"
The homophone for days is "daze." Examples: After being slammed to the ground, the quarterback seemed to be in a daze. Some cold medications leave me feeling dazed and tired.
A homophone for "hyum" could be "hum," which sounds the same but is spelled differently.
A homophone triplet is a set of three words that sound the same but have different meanings and are spelled differently. An example of a homophone triplet is "great," "grate," and "grate."
The homophone for hole is whole. Examples: Did you eat the whole pie? The dog dug a hole in the ground.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
In some dialects, "hurtle" is a homophone for hurdle.
A homophone of "collar" is "caller." Both words sound the same when spoken but have different meanings.
In some dialects, "fax" is a homophone for facts.
Some (as in some of us are going out after work... want to come?)
The homophone for parish is perish.
What homophone dresses up? Read