of Ride, Redness; complexion., imp. of Ride., See Rood, the cross.
Yes, "rode" is a free morpheme. It is lexical (has meaning) and can stand alone.
artfullybrightlybareback (She rode the horse bareback).blithely (meaning cheerfully)creepilydrearilydreamilyfamouslygloballyjoyfullylovinglylightlymightilynightlyrightlypriestlyshabbilyscarcelyscantilysuddenlystupidlystronglysleepilysisterlysecretlysteadilyunkindlywoefully
A homophone is a word that sounds the same as, but has a different meaning than, another word. So a homonym of "road" would be "rode", the past tense of "to ride".
On fire.
i rode a bike i rode my bike this weekend
rode
Verb: to ride; simple past: rode; past participle: ridden It would NOT be correct to say "have rode", since rode is not the participle. You would either say "we rode them" or "we have ridden them" to be correct.
The three homophones of "road" are "rode," "rowed," and "rode." "Rode" is the past tense of "ride," referring to traveling on something like a bicycle or horse. "Rowed" is the past tense of "row," meaning to propel a boat using oars. Each of these words sounds the same but has different meanings and spellings.
¨Sandals: Walked on ¨Donkeys: Rode on ¨Boats: Rode on ¨Horses: Rode on
Rode - you would say 'Bart rode his bike' or 'Lisa rode her pony'
France Rode was born in 1934.
rode, is the simple past tense of ride for example: I rode in the car the other day.