A place where the homophones go to relax. It's sweet.
The homophone suite is a collection of words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. Examples include "their," "there," and "they're," or "to," "two," and "too." Homophones can cause confusion in writing if not used correctly.
One homophone of "suite" is the word "sweet".
The homophone for suite is sweet.
Suite.
Suite. I realize that only has five letters.
The word "sugar" doesn't have a homophone. Sugar may be described as sweet, and suite is a homophone for sweet.
The homophone for suite is sweet.
One homophone of "suite" is the word "sweet".
Suite.
The homophone for suite is sweet.
suite
The word "sugar" doesn't have a homophone. Sugar may be described as sweet, and suite is a homophone for sweet.
suite
sweet, suite
Yes, of "suite."
Suite. I realize that only has five letters.
No, suite is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for a set of things belonging together (a suite of furniture); a group of rooms occupied as a unit (a hotel suite); a set of musical pieces considered as one composition (Bach's Cello Suite No. 3).The homophone sweet is an adjective.
The word "suite" is often pronounced (correctly or incorrectly) as suit, rhymes with boot, when describing furniture. The near-homophone for suit is soot, which has a short OO as in foot.