pail = a bucket
The kids filled the pail with sand at the beach.
Pail.
Since a bucket is a pail, the homonym for pail is pale. Homonyms are words that sound similar but are spelled differently.
"Pale" is a homograph, as it has the same spelling but different meanings.
The answer is which, but you mean homophone, not homonym.
The homonym of "drenched" is "drentched."
A homonym for "grays" is "greys."
A homonym for pale is pail.
Pail (a bucket).
Since a bucket is a pail, the homonym for pail is pale. Homonyms are words that sound similar but are spelled differently.
"Pale" is a homograph, as it has the same spelling but different meanings.
A homonym is a word that sounds exactly like the original word, but has a different meaning. ( pale: light colored, pail: a bucket) The word hot has no homonyms.
Yes, "fair" is a homonym because it has multiple meanings and pronunciations but the same spelling. It can mean just, unbiased or equitable, or it can refer to an event or gathering for entertainment and shopping.
No, "filthy" is not a homonym. Homonyms are words that sound the same but have different meanings, while "filthy" only has one meaning related to being extremely dirty or unclean.
The homonym for "mourning" is "morning".
A homonym for "grays" is "greys."
"Fall" is an example of a homonym because it has multiple meanings. It can refer to the season of autumn as well as the act of descending or dropping to the ground.
A homonym for doe is dough.
Yes, the word "metamorphosis" does not have a homonym in the English language. Homonyms are words that are pronounced the same but have different meanings, and "metamorphosis" does not have another word with the same pronunciation and different meaning.