answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

orange - arrange

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

AnswerBot

6mo ago

The pair of homophones for "cover up" would be "cover" and "up." The small pulpy fruit is spelled "kiwi" and does not have a homophone.

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the pair of homophone for cover up and a small pulpy fruit?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What Homophones of a small pulpy fruit?

Fruit: berry (homophone: bury (cover up)


What is the homophone for the word berry?

The homophone for the word "berry" is "bury." "Berry" refers to a small, pulpy fruit, while "bury" means to place something underground or cover it with something.


What is a small pulpy fruit?

clementine


What is the homophone for small fruit?

The homophone for "small fruit" is "berry".


A small pulpy fruit?

Limes, oranges, and lemons. Any kind of small citrus fruit. Passionfruit; tiny and full of pulp.


What is the homophone for a small round fruit black or blue?

berry, bury


What is guyavano or sour sap?

Do you mean Soursop....it is a dark green, slightly acid, pulpy fruit of a small West Indian Tree


Is tomatoes red?

A tomato is a juicy red fruit. It has a THIN red skin and pulpy inside with whitish greenish yellow small seeds


What is a homophone for slow?

A homophone for "slow" is "sloe", which is a type of small, dark fruit similar to a plum.


What are pulpy fruits?

Orange, grapefruit, lemon...citrus fruits. Note that on the labels of cartons of citrus fruit juices in stores, there is often an option of "with pulp" or "without pulp" (small, solid masses remaining in the juice)


What is the homonym of bury?

The homonym of "bury" is "berry." While "bury" means to place a dead body in the ground, "berry" refers to a small, pulpy, and typically edible fruit.


What is the homophone for to put in the ground and cover with dirt and small round fruit straw black or blue?

The homophones for the given descriptions are: bury/berry.