Rows is an action taken to move a boat across the water using oars.
Rows are a horizontal arrangement of elements (think rows and columns).
Rows are fights or uproars, like a brawl.
And, if you use the "sound" of the word rows, there are some additional meanings:
Rose is a flower or color
Rose is the past-tense of rise (she rose from the chair)
Roes are the eggs of a fish
Roes are a type of deer
Well, the word Vineet originated from Sanskrit. It actually has 3 meanings: Polite, Humble, Decent. .
Yes, 'madder ' is a word with at least 3 meanings. Apart from the obvious 'more mad' it is also a plant and a dark reddish-purple colour
they are the same
It has several meanings: 1. In the low-frequency sound range, a deep or low sound. "Nero Wolfe emitted a bass rumble." 2. A male singer with a low voice 3. A musical instrument of the violin family, standing six feet tall, which is either bowed or plucked. (sometimes called a bass viol or string bass) 4. An electronic musical instrument, shaped like a guitar with four strings tuned like the instrument in definition #3 and played by plucking the strings. (sometimes called a bass guitar) In all these meanings the word rhymes with chase. However there is an unrelated word which is spelled exactly the same but is pronouced to rhyme with glass. This word means: 1. A family of freshwater fish. 2. A brand name for an English ale (Bass Pale Ale)
It is spelled "purview" and has a few meanings that differ subtly.1) Realm or scope of responsibility. "The purview of the police is enforcing law and order."2) The range of someone's knowledge or experience. "I am afraid that the answer to that question is a bit beyond my purview."3) "law: the body or enacting part of a statute, as distinct from the preamble" I just copy/pasted this - I won't pretend to understand this definition.The first definition is usually the way this word is used.
No, they do not have similar meanings. Yes, they have contradictory meanings. They mean neither the same nor opposite.
knowing that some words are silent like k in knight some word are spelled the same way they are pronounced
i think you're talking about HOMOPHONES! "HOMONYMS" are pronounced the same it CAN be spelled the same "HOMOPHONES" are one type of homonym --they are pronounced the same but *spelled differently examples: to, too, two; there, their, they're "HOMOGRAPHS" are spelled the same, but CAN be pronounced differently "HETERONYMS" are spelled the same but pronounced differently example: (pencil) lead, lead (singer) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homonym http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/homophone (see chart) http://www.factspider.com/ho/homonym.htm...
Try the word "era."
NO!, it is considered a bad luck number because it sounds to much and is spelled the same as the word death in Japanese
Yes, it is in Revelation 19:1, 3, 4, and 6. In some versions of the Bible it is spelled "alleluia" instead of "hallelujah", but it is the same word in the Greek.
Cow in Latin is spelled as Bos primgenius
eye, eve
The word period has 1 part of speech,a noun,but the word has 3 different meanings as a noun.
The word his is the only 3 letter word that can be spelled with the letters h-i-s.
Well, the word Vineet originated from Sanskrit. It actually has 3 meanings: Polite, Humble, Decent. .
ser and estar- both mean to beWords with multiple meanings in spanish are called (PALABRAS POLISEMICAS).Ser and Estar are verbs and you can't use them in the same context. I think you are looking for words that have different meanings not the same ones. For example, Banco, Banco and Banco are spelled the same but have 3 different meanings.Banco: Bank, where you keep money.Banco: A bench, to sit.Banco: Banco de peces; a fish tank.