flower, flour pear, pair
you, ewe.-- seen, scene.- vein, vain. - for, four.
Ware.
Where.
Their.
There.
Two and Too
A homograph for "to ease grief" would be "to seize grief." Although pronounced differently, the words "ease" and "seize" are spelled identically, making them homographs.
The question would be easier to answer if you put it in a whole word. "Ook" can be pronounced differently in differently words, for instance, as in "book" and "spook" they are pronounced differently and would rhyme with different words.
Unphonetic spelling is when a word is spelled differently than it is pronounced. An example would be ballet, which is pronounced Bah (as in cat)-leh (as in lei). The T is silent.
Most names that are not Hispanic in origin are spelled the same in Spanish and in English, but may be pronounced differently. Ulman is spelled the same but would probably be pronounced "OOL-mahn" by a person who speaks Spanish. Sites such as learn-spanish.co.il provide audio pronunciations of many common Spanish words.
Hertz Hurts
It's pronounced exactly the same in Hawaiian as it is in English, but it's spelled differently: Keila.
You would pronounce the words 'Meyer lemon' in English almost like they are spelled. However, the word 'Meyer is pronounced 'my-er.' In other words, the words would be pronounced similar to 'my-er leh-mon.'
because it may have been pronounced differently. like this hah-nah. but if it had 2 n's, then it would sound like hannah.
The negative of "would" is "would not", often spelled (and pronounced) as "wouldn't".
German translation of definite article 'the' is der (masculine), die (feminine) or das (neutral). It is spelled differently, because German is a different language. If they were spelled the same, it would not be German, but English.
No. But why would you name a girl that anyway?
It would just be Brianna except it could be pronounced differently.