soared/sword (or flew/flue/flu)
You can't say "the soared" in English; the word is just soared. The eagle soared on the wind. We soared over the earth in our plane.
Soared is the past tense of the verb to soar.
The word soared has one syllable.
The word "soared" has one syllable.
The value of Germany's currency dropped and inflation soared. <---novanet answer
The twin-boomed aircraft soared and swooped overhead, temporarily bedazzling the camp's guards.
The cast of The Mouse That Soared - 2009 includes: Kyle Bell as Audience Member
The Germanic root of sword (usually pronounced as a homophone of "soared") applies to the weapon, and sward (rhymes with hard) to the "skin" or "scalp" of the earth. During its adoption by Old English, the term sweord lost the "w" sound of the German schwert.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Him is the homophone for hymn.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
the homophone for stationery is stationary