Homograph:
Close the door when you get close to the house.
The first is usually pronounced KLŌZ, while the second is KLŌſ
If the fonts don't show correctly, it's K, L, Long O, Long S.
Homophone:
Please close your dresser drawers after putting your new clothes away.
This is regional, as some people pronounce this as KLŌTHS, or KLŌZTH, while some pronounce this as KLŌZ.
The homonym for "close" is "close." It can mean both to shut or to end something, as in "close the door" or "close the store."
"Clothes" is a homonym of "close."
Clothes
rode
Made
Close
in the strictest sense of the word; close as in proximity or close as in shutting something. In a looser sense you could use clothes as a homophone.
A homonym for "grays" is "greys."
The homonym for 'suite' is 'sweet'.
Was is a linking verb. It does not have a homonym.
in the strictest sense of the word; close as in proximity or close as in shutting something. In a looser sense you could use clothes as a homophone.
A homonym for "advice" is "advise." "Advice" is a noun meaning a recommendation or suggestion, while "advise" is a verb meaning to give advice or guidance.
The meanings are very close. Both refer to words that have the same sound but different meanings. A homonym also has the same spelling. Homophones can have different spellings as long as the pronunciation is the same.
you can say "r" which is not really a homonym, or you can say "our" which isn't pronounced EXACTLY the same, but is very, very close. for some reason i think there's another one, but my brain won't let me at it right now...
No, "filthy" is not a homonym. Homonyms are words that sound the same but have different meanings, while "filthy" only has one meaning related to being extremely dirty or unclean.
The homonym for "mourning" is "morning".
A homonym for "grays" is "greys."
"Fall" is an example of a homonym because it has multiple meanings. It can refer to the season of autumn as well as the act of descending or dropping to the ground.
The homonym is sell
There is no homonym for December.
Yes, the word "metamorphosis" does not have a homonym in the English language. Homonyms are words that are pronounced the same but have different meanings, and "metamorphosis" does not have another word with the same pronunciation and different meaning.
A homonym for doe is dough.