wave and waive
The two homophones are "tied" (done with shoelaces) and "tide" (rise and fall of the sea).
"Rice" and "rise" are homophones because they're pronounced the same but spelt differently. The third letter is only spelling difference, which "rice" uses C, but it pronounces the same as "rise" because that's a soft C as the following letter is E. Another opinion: that may be true in some places, but where I live we pronounce 'rise' as 'rize', and I have never heard it said any other way even on US television. In my experience, they are NOT homophones. I agree with that I don't pronounce rice (ris) the same as rise (riz)
The rise and fall of the voice is known as intonation. Intonation involves variations in pitch and tone that can convey meaning and emotion in spoken language.
Rise in intonation refers to a rise in pitch at the end of a sentence, often indicating a question or uncertainty. Fall in intonation refers to a lowering of pitch at the end of a sentence, typically indicating a statement or completion. It is a key aspect of how we convey meaning and emotion in spoken language.
The four types of intonation in English are falling intonation, rising intonation, fall-rise intonation, and rise-fall intonation. Falling intonation is when the pitch of the voice falls at the end of a sentence, indicating finality. Rising intonation is when the pitch of the voice rises at the end of a sentence, indicating a question. Fall-rise intonation is a combination of falling and rising pitch within a sentence, often used in expressing uncertainty or surprise. Rise-fall intonation is when the pitch rises and then falls at the end of a sentence, indicating disbelief or disappointment.
The rise-fall intonation pattern for "I am going to tell you a story" is typically used to convey a statement with a sense of assertion and certainty. The pitch rises slightly on "going" and falls on "story", indicating the completion of the thought and a sense of finality.
"Rice" and "rise" are homophones because they're pronounced the same but spelt differently. The third letter is only spelling difference, which "rice" uses C, but it pronounces the same as "rise" because that's a soft C as the following letter is E. Another opinion: that may be true in some places, but where I live we pronounce 'rise' as 'rize', and I have never heard it said any other way even on US television. In my experience, they are NOT homophones. I agree with that I don't pronounce rice (ris) the same as rise (riz)
It does not rise or fall. It is an imaginary line.
Fall is the height of a slanted or diagonal straight surface. Gradient is the result of rise divided by fall (rise/fall) (rise over fall)
The rise and fall is the tides.
rise
An Orchestrated Rise to Fall was created on -19-12-09.
The word is undulate. It means rise and fall.
rise
rise
an area where rivers rise and fall with ocean tides
The author of Rise and Fall of Darth Vader is Ryder Windham
Because of gravity.