Bob, you can eat that pear only if there is a pair of them for me and you.
You can't pare a pear with a pair of scissors. Please pare the peel from the apple. There's a tear in my new pair of pants.
Lettuce eat the salad. (Instead of "let us" eat the salad.")What a funny pear we make. (referring to a pair of people while holding a pear)
It is a word with same pronunciation's but different spelling and meaning .example:pear-pair
The dust commingled with rain after the storm. OR The diced apple, orange, and pear were commingled to create the fruit medley. Hope that helps!
Assuage means to satisfy something. A good sentence would be, she had the opportunity to assuage her desire for a new pair of shoes.
Pear is a homonym for pair.
The homophone of "pair" is "pear."
Homonyms for pare are pair and pear. You can pare a pair of pears.
'Peer' is not a homophone for the other two, at least not in British English. We say it to rhyme with 'ear', not 'air'. However, you could have 'The peer planted a pair of pear trees.'
You can't pare a pear with a pair of scissors. Please pare the peel from the apple. There's a tear in my new pair of pants.
Pair, pare, and pear all sound alike but have different meanings.
how do you write ordered pair in a sentence
The homophone that means fruit is "pear" and "pair."
He took a bite into the succulent pear.
Two homophones for "pear" are "pare" and "pair."
pair
pear