Yes. "Which" is more correct than "witch."
I will wait here for you.
He caught a cold from the draft coming in the window. This sentence uses the correct homophone.
"Did you eat your beets at lunch?" - Beets is the correct homophone for this sentence, as it refers to the vegetable.
The teacher asked the class, "can anyone put a homophone in a sentence for me".
The sentence "I bought a new pair of shoes" used the incorrect homophone. The correct homophone should be "I brought a new pair of shoes."
The compound sentence "I went to the store, and then I visited my friend" contains correct punctuation.
He caught a cold from the draft coming in the window. This sentence uses the correct homophone.
"Did you eat your beets at lunch?" - Beets is the correct homophone for this sentence, as it refers to the vegetable.
The teacher asked the class, "can anyone put a homophone in a sentence for me".
The sentence "I bought a new pair of shoes" used the incorrect homophone. The correct homophone should be "I brought a new pair of shoes."
The compound sentence "I went to the store, and then I visited my friend" contains correct punctuation.
Sure, please provide me with the sentence and the homophones to choose from.
The homophone for "correct" is "corrupt."
The correct homophone is "too" cold to stay outside very long.
No, the sentence "Is the old miner was lost in the desert" is not a homophone sentence. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, such as "there," "their," and "they're."
There is no homophone for outburst that's correct.
caller & collar
inside