The homophone for "heel" is "heal", and for "he'll" it is "heal" as well. Both pairs of words have the same pronunciation but different meanings.
The homophone for "hill" is "heel."
The homophone for "hell" is "shell."
One homophone for "feel" is "heel". It sounds the same but has a different spelling and meaning.
A homophone for a contraction is "its" and "it's". "Its" is a possessive pronoun, while "it's" is the contraction of "it is" or "it has".
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Heel is a homophone for heal. Heal is a synonym for cure.
The word cure doesn't have a homophone. Heal is another word for cure, and its homophone is heel
One homophone for "feel" is "heel". It sounds the same but has a different spelling and meaning.
Exactly what I said to my sick sheep: "Ewe heal."
A homophone for a contraction is "its" and "it's". "Its" is a possessive pronoun, while "it's" is the contraction of "it is" or "it has".
it's Heel not hell any way its a mule
The homophone for "hell" is "shell."
how to make heel on little alchemy
Yes. The EA pair in heal has a long E sound as in meal and steal. The homophone is "heel."
I'm a tar heel born i am a tar heel heel bred and when I die I'm a tar heel dead. so its Ra Ra Carolina Ra Ra Carolina Ra Ra Ra go to hell duke
if you were a nice and good person, than your soul goes to the heaven. But if you were a bad and mean person it goes to the hell. And its burns at the hell.
One homophone for heal is heel, the end of your foot or of a loaf of bread; another is the contraction he'll. Example sentences: Mom tripped because the heel of her shoe broke off. Dad called to say he'll be working late tonight.