The homophone for heard is herd as in a herd of cattle.
Herd.
A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another word, but has a different spelling and meaning. In this case, the homophone for herd would be heard. They are spelled differently. Herd is a grouping of animals. Heard is the past tense of hear.
A good homophone would be tied. A homophone is spelled diffferently but sounds the same. ex. herd, heard; to, too, two
Hurdle. (Other possibilities include: herd all/heard all/herd'll)
band, banned troop, troupe herd, heard guild, gild knot, not
The homophone for "drove" is "drove." In this case, the word is spelled the same but has different meanings based on context.
A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another word, but has a different spelling and meaning. In this case, the homophone for herd would be heard. They are spelled differently. Herd is a grouping of animals. Heard is the past tense of hear.
heard
herd, heard
A good homophone would be tied. A homophone is spelled diffferently but sounds the same. ex. herd, heard; to, too, two
Hurdle. (Other possibilities include: herd all/heard all/herd'll)
band, banned troop, troupe herd, heard guild, gild knot, not
The homophone for "drove" is "drove." In this case, the word is spelled the same but has different meanings based on context.
group of cows = herd listened = heard
The correct homophone in this instance is herd."Did you see the herd of cattle?"
No, "many" is not a homophone. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings or spellings, like "to," "two," and "too."
Some sentences for there (location, existence) and they're (they are): They heard about the fair, and they're going there. There are some things that they're not telling us. (the third homophone is "their", which is the possessibe form of they.)
The homophone of farther is father.