Alliteration .
They are called homophones. Words such as there/their/they're. They sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings. They may or may not sound the same.
Alliteration.
No. The term for opposite words is antonyms.The term homophones (sound-alike) means words that are pronounced the same.
The term for two words that look the same but have different meanings and pronunciations is "heteronym."
The term you are referring to is "visual rhyme." Visual rhymes occur when words look similar but do not sound the same.
its called an alliteration
Words that sound the same are "homophones". There may not be a specific term for a rhyming pair of homophones. Examples : * Threw through * Sun son * Airy aerie * Least leased (see related link)
The answer to your question is homophone.Homophone is the definition to two words in the same spelling is homophones i might not have spelled it right but look it up or sound it out.Not to be mean :)
This sentence demonstrates onomatopoeia, which is a poetic device where words mimic the sounds they describe, like "sizzled" representing the sound of bacon cooking.
The term for a word or sentence that reads the same in both directions is "palindrome."
The words are called homophones ("same sound"). Examples : bare-bear, awl-all, rain-rein-reign.The term homonyms is also used. But sometimes this is restricted to words that have the same sound and the same spelling. This could be also described as a single word with multiple meanings.