Bold, bald and bowled. As in BOLD letters, no hair and he bowled the ball.
~FlapJack.
The homophone of "bold" is "bowled."
The homophone of "bowled" is "bold."
The homophone for dynamic is dynamo.
bowled She has never bowled before, but she ended up with a decent score anyway. The novice bowler boldly bowled her first ball in bowling.
The homophone for the word "whirred" would be the word "word."
No, the word beach is not a homophone. A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different meaning, such as "to," "two," and "too."
The homophone of "bowled" is "bold."
The homophone for dynamic is dynamo.
bowled She has never bowled before, but she ended up with a decent score anyway. The novice bowler boldly bowled her first ball in bowling.
The word "strawberry" has no homophone. The homophone of the word berry is bury.
No, the word beach is not a homophone. A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different meaning, such as "to," "two," and "too."
A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another but has a different meaning. The homophone for the word wood is would.
The word you refered to is bowled. The homophone is highlighted in example sentences below: Gina, whose usually very shy, took a bold step today and asked Chris out for a date. Do you prefer bold or pastel colors? Most teachers don't like Stephanie because she makes bold statements and is not afraid to disagree with authority figures.
The homophone for the word "hour" is "our".
"Seen" is a homophone for the word "scene."
The homophone for the word "presents" is "presence."
The homophone for the word "whirred" would be the word "word."
A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another, but is spelled differently. For the word "past," a homophone would be the word "passed."