Moar
moore
A word with the same pronunciation as another but with a different meaning is called a homophone.
Heteronyms are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings and are pronounced differently, while homographs are words that are spelled the same and may or may not have different meanings but are pronounced the same.
Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, origins, or spellings. Common types of homophones include homographs (same spelling, different meaning), homonyms (same spelling and pronunciation, different meaning), and heterographs (different spelling, same pronunciation).
it provide the same meaning but different spelling and pronunciation
They are called "homonyms".
A homograph is a word that is spelled the same as another word, but has a different meaning and often a different pronunciation. An example of a homograph is "bat" (flying mammal) and "bat" (sports equipment).
The term for a word that is spelled the same as another word but has a different meaning, history, and sometimes pronunciation is "homograph."
They are homographs.
A homonym for "kill" could be "chill," which is a different word with the same pronunciation but a different meaning.
False. They are synonyms ( they mean the same thing). Homonyms have the same spelling and the same pronunciation, but different meanings. (For the record, same sound, different meaning and spelling are homophones; same spelling, different sound and meaning are homographs.)
The prefix for "homonym" is "homo-" meaning "same," and the suffix is "-nym" meaning "name." Together, they form a word that means two or more words that have the same spelling or pronunciation but different meanings.