telephone
A homophone for "peel" that rhymes could be "feel."
weak
* The words "caught" are "court" are considered homophones in the UK and Australia, where both are pronounced (kawt).In US English, there is no homophone for "caught" (usually kawt, rhymes with taught, for which there is a homophone, taut).Some dialect rhymes or near rhymes are:- court (US kort)- cot (US kott), a small bed- cawed, what the crows did
The homophone for "smallest in amount rent under written agree" is "least" (rhymes with "leased").
There are no exact rhymes except for proper nouns (e.g. Amberger, Shamberger). The word "burglar" is a near-homophone. There are near rhymes for "further" and "merger" e.g. cram further, jam further, damn merger.
Pare (a homophone of pear, not just a rhyming word) means to trim or cut away, and tear might work as well.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Him is the homophone for hymn.
No. It has a short U sound, a homophone of sum. It rhymes with come and plum.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
the homophone for stationery is stationary
The homophone is dense.