"Pants" in these contexts is a homograph, not a homophone.
A homophone for a heavy release of breath is "sigh" and "sigh."
I think you're looking for "pants." That's a homograph, not a homophone.
pant, like a dog panting, and pants
A heavy release of breath is pant and the clothes you wear is pants. Really tricky
I don't think there is a homophone for that, srry!
light "not heavy" and light "not dark"
You would need clothing with several different degrees of insulation, ranging from heavy, through very heavy, extremely heavy, awesomely heavy, and astronomically heavy, to incredibly heavy and impractically heavy.
A homophone for 'whale' is 'wale'; it means a plank, usually part of a ship, or a weal on the skin from heavy contact with a thin, flexible object.
The homophone for mite is might. Example sentences: The weather report indicated that it might rain. He tried with all his might to lift that heavy box.
As a heavy breath. grunt or sigh - it is.
Your mom... and nose hairs.
The homophone for kneading is needing as in the example sentence below:I am tired of needing a heavy, winter jacket every time I go outside.