But, cut, hut, mutt, nut, putt, rut, what.
A homophone for the word "close" is "clothes." Both words sound the same when spoken, but have different meanings and spellings.
Homophones are words that have exactly the same sound but are different in meaning and spelling.for example : hour, ourHomographs are words that have the same spelling but different meanings and may or may not be pronounced the same way.for example : bear (the animal), bear (to carry)Homonyms have the same sound and same spelling with a different meaning.Homophones have the same sound but different spellings and meanings.Homographs have the same spelling but a different meaning (and possibly a different sound).
Yes. Both words have a short U (uh) sound. Rhyming words include but, cut, and shut.
The word hose has a long O vowel sound, as in doze and close (to shut).The long O is also heard in:- words with an O (go, comb, cold)- words with an O with a silent E (note, hole)- words with an OE (doe, foe)- words with an OA (loan, boat)- words with OUGH (dough, though)- words with OW (flow, mow, row)- the EW words sew and sewnAlso the French spellings eau, eaux, and aux (beau, faux).
slumber repose dormition shut-eye
"Shut up" is spelled as two words, "shut" and "up."
Homophone clues are wordplay riddles where the answer involves words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. For example, "I am taken from a mine, and shut up in a wooden case, from which I am never released, and yet I am used by almost every person. What am I?" The answer is "pencil" (taken from the mine = graphite, shut up in a wooden case = pencil).
The present tense of "shut" is "shut." It remains the same in both past and present tense.
The past form of "shut" is "shut." It remains the same in both the present and past tense.
Chiudere is an Italian equivalent of 'to shut'. It's pronounced 'kee-OO-deh-ray'.* Another equivalent is the infinitive 'serrare', which tends to mean 'to shut' in the sense of 'to lock'.*The sound 'ay' is similar to the sound 'ay' in the English noun 'ray'.
No. It might be the ending of a word such as 'callelo' - shut it up, silence it
They sound if you have amplifier and shut if you don't