A homograph is the same spelling of words with two different meanings.
Fire is a homograph because it can be used in two different meanings: "Man made fire." and "Fire that gun."
Fly is a homograph: "Swat the fly." and "I want to fly away."
Tire is a homograph: "Fix the tire." "You really tire me out."
So they all are homographs.
Fire
D. All of the above. Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings, such as "fire" (flames), "fly" (insect), and "tire" (wheel part).
fly
The homograph for "get down from" is "I need to get down from the ladder" and for "on fire" is "The building is on fire".
fly
Light
The homograph for "short" could be: "He was feeling short of breath."
The homograph with both meanings of "not heavy" and "set fire to" is "light." It can refer to something that is not heavy in weight and also describe the act of setting something on fire.
Clear.
The homograph of "become weary" is "tear," which can refer to ripping something or shedding a drop of water from the eye. The homograph of "rubber around the wheel" is "rubber," which can mean an eraser or a material used for tires.
it's a homograph
i got the fire fly by breeding fire and lightning
with its wings?!