yea there is effect,affect and more but i forgot them.
Two homophones for the letter "e" are "he" and "hee."
In French, the acute accent is used on the letter "e" as in "é" to indicate a change in pronunciation such as in "café." It can also be used on the letter "e" at the end of a word to differentiate between homophones, like "ou" (or) and "où" (where).
beat -beetcheep-cheapweak-weekheal-healsteal-stealcreek-creaksee-seameet-meatdeer-dearreed-readpeek-peaktee-teateem-teamflee-fleabeech-beachleek-leak
Some homophones for "there" are "their" and "they're."
The homophones of "hello" are "hallo" and "hullo".
Homophones for "ware" are "wear" and "where."
You can add either an E or an A after the E to get a long E sound. The words beet and beatare homophones (sound-alike words).
See and sea
because they do
You don't make homophones.Two words are homophones if they are pronounced the same way but differ in meaning, spelling or both (e.g. bare and bear)Some words are homophones some are not.aid and aide are homophones that start with 'a'.
xero and zero
"Rice" and "rise" are homophones because they're pronounced the same but spelt differently. The third letter is only spelling difference, which "rice" uses C, but it pronounces the same as "rise" because that's a soft C as the following letter is E. Another opinion: that may be true in some places, but where I live we pronounce 'rise' as 'rize', and I have never heard it said any other way even on US television. In my experience, they are NOT homophones. I agree with that I don't pronounce rice (ris) the same as rise (riz)
The I has a long I sound, as in the homophones wright and rite. The E is silent.
beat -beetcheep-cheapweak-weekheal-healsteal-stealcreek-creaksee-seameet-meatdeer-dearreed-readpeek-peaktee-teateem-teamflee-fleabeech-beachleek-leak
There can be no anagram (too many consonants). The longest words are the homophones bawl and batt, and wilt and wait. You would need an E to spell the six-letter words "battle" or "tablet."
Some homophones for "there" are "their" and "they're."
The homophones of "hello" are "hallo" and "hullo".
Homophones for "ware" are "wear" and "where."