"Knew," "nu,", and "gnu" are the homophones for "new."
I wish I knew the answer.
Was that a gnu or a deer we saw at the zoo?
The homophone for "new" is "knew."
our as in This is our new house.
A homophone for "gnu" is "new."
A homophone for "had an understanding of" is "had understanding of."
A homophone for the opposite of old and had an understanding of is "new" and "knew."
A homophone for the opposite of "old" could be "younger."
A homophone for "had an understanding of" is "had understanding of."
knew
new, knew
our as in This is our new house.
A homophone for the opposite of old and had an understanding of is "new" and "knew."
The homophone of the past tense of "know" is "knew."
new, knew, gnu
A homophone for the opposite of "old" could be "younger."
New and Knew
He knew the answer so he raised his hand.Do you need new shoes?Also, depending on your dialect, you may pronounce "new" as "noo" not "nyoo", in which case gnu is also a homophone.
Homophones exist for words not phrases, a homophone is two or more words that have the same pronunciation but different meanings, origins, or spelling (e.g. new and knew). So there is no homophone for "to gain" and there is also no homophone for 'gain'.
new, knew, gnu