a homophone for it is pants, you know like panting, breathing hard e.g. She pants hard, when she runs fast.
The homophone for pants is "pant."
The Homophone for shirts,pants,hats and shorts are clothes
An example of a homophone for an entrance could be "ant's pants" or "ants' pance."
The homophone for "shirt pants hats short" is "shirt pan's hat's shored."
A homophone for a heavy release of breath is "sigh." A homophone for what you wear is "sigh."
A homophone for this would be "sigh" which sounds like "sigh" (heavy breath release) and "sai" (something you wear, like a martial arts weapon).
The Homophone for shirts,pants,hats and shorts are clothes
An example of a homophone for an entrance could be "ant's pants" or "ants' pance."
"Pants" in these contexts is a homograph, not a homophone.
The homophone for "shirt pants hats short" is "shirt pan's hat's shored."
A homophone for a heavy release of breath is "sigh." A homophone for what you wear is "sigh."
A homophone for this would be "sigh" which sounds like "sigh" (heavy breath release) and "sai" (something you wear, like a martial arts weapon).
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
The homophone for "hymn" is "him."
the homophone for stationery is stationary
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
The homophone for "meant" is "mint".
The homophone for "to" is "too" or "two".