You can make a few sentences with the word market. You can use the sentences "I am going to the market" and "The market prices are going down".
brainstorming
I believe it is a large market. i.e. Super Market.
Supermarket Flea Market Farmer's market Meat market Stock Market
The word "market" can indeed be used as a verb, for example, "to market a product".
The word 'market' is a noun, a word for a place where goods are offered for sale, a public gathering held for buying and selling merchandise; a word for a place, a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb to market are marketer and the gerund, marketing.
There are different meanings for the word setting. Here are sentences using two different meanings: The setting of the play was in a small, friendly community. The fine bone china and gold flatware made a beautiful place setting for the elegant dinner party.
follow the example and them use the following honographs in your own sentences making two sentences of each word in such a way that their different meanings are lcear change, fix, contract, fast, cool
they have different meanings
a homophone
its connotation
The word "its" is a homograph because it is spelled the same as another word (it's) but has a different meaning and pronunciation. Homophones are words that sound the same but are spelled differently, like "there," "their," and "they're."
Yes it is. It has different meanings.
One word with many meanings is a homograph.
The bobbies carried the hooligan bodily from the market.
She was feeling unwell, so she decided to stay home and rest. The presentation was informative, so the audience paid close attention. I studied diligently for the exam, so I was confident in my abilities.
Homonyms are words that are pronounced the same but have different meanings, while homographs are words that are spelled the same but may have different pronunciations and meanings. In other words, homonyms sound the same but can be spelled differently, while homographs are spelled the same but can be pronounced differently.
"Period" can refer to a punctuation mark (.), a length of time, such as a school period or menstrual period, or a specific historical era.