past
The word "past" sounds the same as "passed" but is spelled differently.
A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another, but is spelled differently. For the word "past," a homophone would be the word "passed."
The homophone of "burn" is "bern," which sounds the same but is spelled differently.
A homophone for "servant" is "servent," which sounds the same but is spelled differently.
The word that sounds exactly like "sore" but is spelled differently is "soar."
The homophone for a covering is "cove-ring", which sounds the same but is spelled differently.
A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another, but is spelled differently. For the word "past," a homophone would be the word "passed."
they spelt differently but they sound the same
Yes. Homonyms are words that are spelled the same, but have different meanings. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings. So, homonyms can include homophones, as they can be both spelled and sound the same.
A homonym for mined is mind. A homonym is a word that is spelled differently, but sounds the same, as another word. A homophone is a word that is spelled the same and sounds the same, but has a different meaning from another word.
A lagoon is a swampy lake. A homophone is a word that sounds the same but spelled differently.
A homonym is a word that is spelled differently but sounds the same. So it could be "team."
Freak. Its spelled the same as in English, but sounds differently! hope this helped u!
The word (homophone) for bridle is "bridal" (pertaining to a bride).
A homonym is a word that is spelled differently from the given word, but sounds the same. So a homonym for "gnu" is "new".
A word that is spelled the same but pronounced differently is called a heteronym.
The word that sounds exactly like "sore" but is spelled differently is "soar."
No, "surround" is not a homophone. A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another word but is spelled differently and has a different meaning. "Surround" does not meet this definition as there is no other word that sounds exactly like it.