Homophones for "ware" are "wear" and "where."
Homophones for "ware" include "wear" and "where."
A homophone for "Where" could be wear
Wear, were, where, ware and we're (At least in England they are homophones, apparently in some other English speaking countries they may not be, in which case you'll have to find another set).Fair, Fayre, Fare, Fir and Fur (obviously with the proviso that different pronunciations may apply)Another answer: Wear, where and ware are homophones (phonetic pronunciation wâr), but were and we're are prononouced differently (wûr and wîr, respectively).The two disputed words can be correct or wrong depending on accent or dialect.Lays, laze, lais, lase, leis.
Some homophones for "there" are "their" and "they're."
The homophones of "hello" are "hallo" and "hullo".
The homophones of "walk" are "wok" and "woke."
A homophone for "Where" could be wear
Wear, were, where, ware and we're (At least in England they are homophones, apparently in some other English speaking countries they may not be, in which case you'll have to find another set).Fair, Fayre, Fare, Fir and Fur (obviously with the proviso that different pronunciations may apply)Another answer: Wear, where and ware are homophones (phonetic pronunciation wâr), but were and we're are prononouced differently (wûr and wîr, respectively).The two disputed words can be correct or wrong depending on accent or dialect.Lays, laze, lais, lase, leis.
Some homophones for "there" are "their" and "they're."
The homophones of "hello" are "hallo" and "hullo".
The homophones of "walk" are "wok" and "woke."
The homophones for bite are byte and bight.
homophones for where: wear and wareware: similar things, or things that are made of the same material (example: flatware, tableware, software). wear: to put on or try on articles of clothing. I prefer to wear slippers than sandals. where: used to ask about or indicate the place that somebody or something is in, at, going to, or coming from. Where is the nearest gas station?
Homophones for "in that place" are "their" and "there." Homophones for "belonging to them" include "their" and "they're." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
The homophones for there are they're and their.
The homophones for "know" are "no" and "gnaw". The homophones for "nose" are "knows" and "nays".
The homophones opposite of "yes" are "yews" and "yews." The homophones for "to understand" are "two understand" and "too understand."
Yes, there are homophones in the French language. Homophones are words that are pronounced the same but have different meanings. For example, "verre" (glass) and "vert" (green) are homophones in French.