They are homophones, also sometimes called homonyms: words that are pronounced the same but spelled differently.
established, located, placed, situated, stationed, positioned
Hesitating and hesitation are two words with the base word "hesitate."
kind.
Heteronyms is the correct answer.Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings. Heteronyms are a type of homograph that are also spelledthe same and have different meanings, but sound different.
When referring to the musical instrument, the plural of bass is basses. When referring to the fish, the plural of bass is just bass.
They had to leave the Army base to catch bass at the lake. The bass setting when listening to music is the base of an enjoyable experience.
bass
A homophone for bass (the instrument) is the word base.
Bass is Base was created in 1993.
The homophone of "base" is "bass."
No. Those two words have different meanings and spellings are not interchangeable. but bass (sound effect) and bass (fish) are the same, so the english language fails.
You pronounce it with a long a like "base ist".
Bass are fish.
Its spelled BASS but it sounds like BASE...
Depends on what kind of bass it is
"Drum and Bass" is a style of music comprised of heavy bass/sub bass and fast breakbeats.
It's pronounced 'base' as in the 'bass' from a subwoofer, not 'bass' as in the fish. If you actually listen to the song you can hear her pronounce it as 'base' (Obviously spelt as 'bass', but with the long A sound.)