jake the dog and finn the human
The homophone for "whose" is "who's," which is the contraction for "who is" or "who has."
The homophone for who's is whose. Another possible homophone is "hoos," referring to multiple owl sounds.
The contraction who's (who is) is pronounced the same as the possessive pronoun whose. Because who's has an apostrophe, it can be mistaken as a possessive form. But whose is used as an adjective, typically before nouns.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
The homophone of farther is father.
The homophone for "whose" is "who's," which is the contraction for "who is" or "who has."
The homophone for who's is whose. Another possible homophone is "hoos," referring to multiple owl sounds.
It's a homophone. Homophones are words whose pronunciation is the same, but their spelling is different. Homographs have the same spelling but different pronunciation. In this case, the homophone of the word "your" is "you're", short of "you are".
The contraction who's (who is) is pronounced the same as the possessive pronoun whose. Because who's has an apostrophe, it can be mistaken as a possessive form. But whose is used as an adjective, typically before nouns.
The homophone of farther is father.
The homophone for "to" is "too" or "two".
The homophone for "meant" is "mint".
no there is not a homophone
The homophone is bee.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
The homophone for tale is tail.
the homophone for too is two and to. There is no homophone for much