coarse, course
A homophone for rough is "ruff," and a homophone for place of golf is "course."
A homophone for "rough" is "ruff," and a homophone for "place for golf" is "tee."
The homophone for "rough" is "ruff," and the place for golf is a "course."
coarse and course
The homophone for a rough golf course is "course."
A place to play golf that is a homophone of "rough" is "fair." Golf courses are made up of fairways, greens, and hazards like sand traps and water bodies. The fairway is the groomed part of the course that leads from the tee box to the green.
The homophone is "course" (golf venue, college instruction, or path of water).
On the golf score board, the designation "T2" means tied for second place.
Course. It can be an adjective to describe the texture of an object. An object that is course will have a rough, bumpy texture as opposed to a smooth texture. Course as a noun could refer to a golf course. Course as a noun could also be a class taken in school.
play golf pls
Tea - the tea you drink Tee - the one in golf A homophone are words that sound the same but are spent differently.
No. The word "rough" means coarse, not smooth, or areas off the fairway in golf. The imitative spelling for a bark by a dog is "ruff ruff" (similar to "woof woof").