won
won
won
Won is a homophone for one.
Yes.
Won would be a homonym.
Homonym means to sound the same. A homonym for one (a number) is won (the past tense of win).
The homophone for "one" is "won."
Won.
the desception of "one" is a number.
homophone words sound the same, but mean something different.
so the homophone for one is "won"
because they sound the same. as "one" is a number. but "won" is past tense of "win"
won
The homophone for "won" is "one".
One homophone for "do" is "due."
A homophone for switch is "which."
One homophone for "an" is "ann."
One homophone for "to" is "too."
The homophone for "won" is "one".
There isn't one. There is a homonym but not a homophone.
No, "own" and "won" are not homophones. "Own" is pronounced as OHN, while "won" is pronounced as WUN.
One homophone of "guessed" is "guest."
One homophone of "suite" is the word "sweet".
A homophone for the word "suffering" is "surfing."
There isn't one, but it is a synonym of field which is a homophone of feald.
There isn't one, but ancient is a synonym of yore, which is a homophone of your.
yes there is one is the hot springs and other is the season
The homophone for sight is site
The homophone for honorary is "honourary." Both words sound the same but have different spellings and meanings.
The homonyms of 'to' are 'too' and 'two'. 'Too' means in addition or also, while 'two' is the number 2.