The homonym of "bean" is "been." "Bean" refers to a type of seed or legume, while "been" is the past participle of the verb "to be."
bean
Dream, cream, seen, bean, bring, green, mean.
The answer is which, but you mean homophone, not homonym.
The homonym of "drenched" is "drentched."
A homonym for "grays" is "greys."
bean
Dream, cream, seen, bean, bring, green, mean.
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."
I'm not completely certain that I'm getting your intention. I edited the question and changed "union of sound" to "unit of sound". Later I went back and changed it to the original 'union', realizing you may have meant chord (and its homonym cord). I thought you were going for a homonym of "sone". The sone is a unit of sound and a homonym would be sewn. A homonym for weight would be wait. For the rope, you may be going for cord and chord. I'm thinking you are asking for a vegetable whose name has a homonym, but I'm stumped. There is bean and the British pronunciation of been.
"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.
A homonym for doe is dough.
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.
The homonym is sell
The homonym for December is dismember, which means to cut off the limbs of a person or animal. It is important to pay attention to context to understand the intended meaning of the word.
The homonym of hymn is him.