A tired vegetable is simply a vegetable that is going off.
A beat beet is a homophone pair for a tired red vegetable. beet = the red vegetable beat = slang for tired, as in After a long day at work, I'm just beat!
That's Spanish for "I am very tired now". Since "tired" is in feminine, that means it is a woman who is talking.
very tired
when a vegetable is placed in very salty water, the vegetable becomes soft and collapses. Why does this happen?
when a vegetable is placed in very salty water, the vegetable becomes soft and collapses. Why does this happen?
when a vegetable is placed in very salty water, the vegetable becomes soft and collapses. Why does this happen?
when a vegetable is placed in very salty water, the vegetable becomes soft and collapses. Why does this happen?
The word "carat" (karat) has the homonyms (homophones) caret and carrot. CARET - the keyboard symbol (^) CARROT - a vegetable plant with an edible orange root
you can say "r" which is not really a homonym, or you can say "our" which isn't pronounced EXACTLY the same, but is very, very close. for some reason i think there's another one, but my brain won't let me at it right now...
No. Homonym is a noun, meaning a word spelled and/or pronounced like another word with a different meaning. The adjective form is the very rarely used "homonymic."
It is not a homonym.