There's "site" (like a website) and "sight" (like seeing).
cite
sight Nothing is as beautiful as the sight of a new born baby. cite When you write a reseach paper, cite your sources in a bibliography.
No, the word "cite" does not have a short "i" sound. The pronunciation of "cite" uses a long "i" sound, like "site" or "light."
Neither. The word site (a location) is a noun. The homophones sight and cite can both be verbs.
Homophones for "to urge on" include "too" and "yew." Homophones for "the power of seeing" include "the" and "hour."
What is the homophones of impact, cite , and
Sight - Vision, the ability to see Site - A location, usually where some event took place or where something will be built. Cite - To point out, use or reference something with attribution, usually in writing. "In my book I cite several passages from Homer's Odyssey." Sight - A device used to aim or point something in a particular direction.
The homophones for the word "you" are yew and ewe.
Some homophones for the word "projects" are "prophets" and "prorogues."
Some homophones for "forward" are foreword, for word, and four word.
Two homophones for the word "vain" are vein and vane.
A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another word. "Prophet" and "profit" are homophones.