meet, meat, mete
The homophone for lean is "mean".
A homophone for "mean" is "mien."
To "peer" can mean to look at something, or a "peer" can be someone of equal standing such as age group, social standing.
No, but stood can mean rose, which is a homophone of rows.
There is no homophone for race, but it can mean chute or shoot, which are homophones.
The homophone for lean is "mean".
They have an interest in you or in talking
You are. This is if you're talking to someone you are on a first name basis. If not, or it's someone respected highly, you should use 'usted es' to say "you are"
This is supposed to mean that someone is talking about you.
There is no homophone for the word community. Populace can mean community, and its homophone is populous
A homophone for "community" is "comity," which means mutual respect and courtesy among individuals or groups.
to stop talking
No, but stood can mean rose, which is a homophone of rows.
If someone says "it's been a pleasure talking to you," they mean "it was nice talking to you and I enjoyed it."
It means someone talking about you
I think you mean homophone, not homophobe. The homophone of except is accept.
There is no homophone for race, but it can mean chute or shoot, which are homophones.