I'm not completely certain that I'm getting your intention. I edited the question and changed "union of sound" to "unit of sound". Later I went back and changed it to the original 'union', realizing you may have meant chord (and its homonym cord). I thought you were going for a homonym of "sone". The sone is a unit of sound and a homonym would be sewn. A homonym for weight would be wait. For the rope, you may be going for cord and chord. I'm thinking you are asking for a vegetable whose name has a homonym, but I'm stumped. There is bean and the British pronunciation of been.
Homonyms for a weight could be "wait" or "eight," for vegie it could be "veggie" or "veggie," for a union of sound it could be "sew" or "so," and for a small rope it could be "cord" or "chord."
An example of a vowel sound in the English language is the 'a' sound in words like "cat" or "bat." This sound is produced by a relatively open vocal tract with the tongue lowered and pushed towards the front of the mouth.
The possessive form of the noun union is union's.example: Our union's representative has set up a meeting with management.
Use "a" before words that start with a consonant sound, and use "an" before words that start with a vowel sound. The choice depends on the sound of the following word, not the first letter. For example, "a cat" (consonant sound) and "an apple" (vowel sound).
The Sanskrit word for union is "yoga."
Union territory is called "ಐಕ್ಯರಾಜ್ಯ" (Aikyarājya) in Kannada.
carrot, karat chord, cord
east
Saint Martin.
*Make work for the union members
The small Union force was shipped back to Washington.
sorry
The Union was much larger, both in number of states, territory and population
i was in credit union in 1982 and left a small sum in there,what do i do to find out about it
It is a misconception that "an" precedes words that start with a vowel. Rather, it is used before words that start with a vowel sound. Union has a pronunciation that is something like "ˈyoōnyən." The initial sound is that is a "y", not a "u". The opposite is true for words like "honor" (änər), which do not have the sound of an "h".
An example of a vowel sound in the English language is the 'a' sound in words like "cat" or "bat." This sound is produced by a relatively open vocal tract with the tongue lowered and pushed towards the front of the mouth.
65kg
The Confederate Secretary of the Navy was Stephen R. Mallory. He knew the South had no war fleet to take on the Union warships attempting to blockade Southern ports. With that said, Mallory's initial idea was a sound one. He envisioned small and fast Confederate warships to attack the Union's large cargo fleet. Doing damage in that sphere might force a number of Union blockaders to withdraw and defend the Union's cargo fleet. Later Mallory would produce more ways to thwart the Union blockade.