the homophone for yawn is.............you! haha get it lol
A homophone for "yawn" is "yon."
A homophone for "said" is "sade" which is an archaic past tense of "si."
The typical written expression for a yawn sound is "ho hum."
The word "yawn" has three phonemes: /y/ /ɔ/ /n/.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
The homophone for "hymn" is "him."
A homophone for "said" is "sade" which is an archaic past tense of "si."
No. They yawn for the same reasons we do.
they yawn because when you yawn it passes on to other people . so you yawn then someone's right next to you then i think they inhale then they start to yawn ?
yes they yawn quietly
No whales do not yawn.
how do you know you yawn if you are sleeping?
Yes, yawn is an onomatopoeia.
The typical written expression for a yawn sound is "ho hum."
Insects do not yawn. People necessarily do not yawn only when they are tired. Most people, after reading this, will yawn.
A yawn is normally a response to a change in activity, although if you did not get enough sleep, you could become tired and yawn.
The word 'yawn' is both a verb (yawn, yawns, yawning, yawned) and a noun (yawn, yawns). Examples:Verb: I began to yawn in the middle of the lecture.Noun: The comedian's joke met with a big yawn.An adjective is a word that describes a noun, for example: a big yawn.
to yawn is 'bailler' in French.