The homonym for creak is creek.
The homonym for "creek" is "creak." A creek is a small stream of water, while creak is a high-pitched noise made by something that is old or in need of oil.
small stream = creek squeak loudly = creak
The homophone of "creak" is "creek."
A homophone for "creek" is "creak."
The answer is which, but you mean homophone, not homonym.
The homonym for "creek" is "creak." A creek is a small stream of water, while creak is a high-pitched noise made by something that is old or in need of oil.
small stream = creek squeak loudly = creak
The homophone of "creak" is "creek."
The past tense of creak is creaked.
The creak in the door was annoying."Creak..." Squeaked the chair as she moved.Creak! That door needs some oil on the hinges, he exclaimed.
A homophone for "creek" is "creak."
Yes, as in "I heard a creak." But it can also be a verb, as in "The stair creaked."
The constant creak on the floor made him sleepless.
Speak Squeak Creak was created in 1994-09.
The word 'creak' is both a noun (creak, creaks) and a verb (creak, creaks, creaking, creaked).A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb of a preposition.The verb functions as the action of the subject of a sentence or a clause.Examples:There is an annoying creak in the stairs. (noun, direct object of the verb 'is')Every time you step on it, the fourth step will creak sharply. (verb)
you would put it like this ''The creak is basically like a lagoon'' understand?
creak