The homophone is taught.
A homophone for "taut" is "taught".
The homophone for "taught" is "taut."
Taut (meaning tight or rigid) is a homophone for taught.
The homophone for "tot" is "taught".
The homophone of "pulled tight" is "pulled tite".
The homophone of "taught" is "taut." "Taught" is the past tense of the verb "teach," while "taut" means pulled tight or tense.
Taut (meaning tight or rigid) is a homophone for taught.
The homophone for "tot" is "taught".
The homophone for "taught" is "taut."
The homophone of "pulled tight" is "pulled tite".
The homophone of "taught" is "taut." "Taught" is the past tense of the verb "teach," while "taut" means pulled tight or tense.
it would be be taut the rope is taut
* The words "caught" are "court" are considered homophones in the UK and Australia, where both are pronounced (kawt).In US English, there is no homophone for "caught" (usually kawt, rhymes with taught, for which there is a homophone, taut).Some dialect rhymes or near rhymes are:- court (US kort)- cot (US kott), a small bed- cawed, what the crows did
We have to pull this fabric taut, or it will be hard to sew.
Max Taut was born in 1884.
Max Taut died in 1967.
No. Slack and taut are opposite in meaning.
Taut is an adjective, it doesn't have a past tense.