check and cheque
The homophone you are referring to is "halt" and "halt." "Halt" means to bring something to a stop, while "hault" refers to payment of money.
check, cheque
A homophone for "mean" is "mien."
The homophone for lean is "mean".
There is no homophone for race, but it can mean chute or shoot, which are homophones.
The homophone of sett is set. Sett can also mean a burrow, and borough is a homophone for burrow.
The homophone of "green" is "grean".
check, cheque
when you get money
The money that you pay on a biil.
There is no homophone for the word community. Populace can mean community, and its homophone is populous
A homophone for "community" is "comity," which means mutual respect and courtesy among individuals or groups.
When final payment is written on a check, it means in the debtor's eyes, this is the final payment. Other than that, it is not a legally binding statement and they may still owe money and money can be collected from them.
There really is no difference in the terms of money and currency. Currency usually means a form of payment now, when it used to mean paper money. Money means cash and coin as a form of payment. Both terms can also mean credit cards, debit cards, money orders, and all other forms of payment. Checks are still used, but less frequently.
The homophone for lean is "mean".
Yes, "stood" is a homophone. Homophones are words that are pronounced the same but have different meanings or spellings. In this case, "stood" sounds the same as "stewed" or "stewed."
I think you mean homophone, not homophobe. The homophone of except is accept.
There is no homophone for race, but it can mean chute or shoot, which are homophones.
If you mean tows as in 'He tows the boat', then toes is a homophone. A homophone is a word that sounds exactly the same.