Homograph: Words with the same spelling but different meanings, origins, or pronunciations. Homophone: Words that sound the same but have different meanings and often different spellings. Homonym: Words that are spelled and pronounced the same but have different meanings.
A phonetically spelled word is when you spell it the way it sounds. For example, "through" would be "thru". A correctly spelled word is when it is spelled as it is found in the dictionary.
Onomatopoeia: Where sounds are spelled out as words; or, when words describing sounds actually sound like the sounds they describe. I heard him gurgling water.
There are I words with a silent E, such as bite, dime, and while. There are I words spelled with GH such as high, sigh, light, and right. There are I words that begin with the prefix bi- which virtually always sounds like BY, or tri- which sounds like TRY. Examples are binary, bimonthly, and trimester.
When words are spelled the way they sound (e.g., slush, croak, sizzle) it is called onomatopoeia.
i don't know. i HATE words like that!!! it should be spelled fonics or something like that. lol
A homonym for "nose" is "knows." Both words sound the same but have different meanings.
spelled guapo = handsome sounds huapo
they spelt differently but they sound the same
Some other examples of words that are spelled differently but sound the same include: meet/meat, be/bee, and two/too/to.
Anadrome
When two words are spelled similarly but do not rhyme, it is called a visual rhyme or an eye rhyme. This occurs when words have the same visual appearance and spelling pattern but have different sounds or pronunciations.