Kernel and colonel are homophones, meaning they sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. A kernel refers to the softer, usually edible part of a seed, nut, or fruit stone contained within its hard shell. On the other hand, a colonel is a military rank above a lieutenant colonel and below a brigadier general.
The new Colonel is very strict & serious.The kernel in the popcorn machine popped quickly!~ Mr.Sapphire
Kernel, infernal, journal, internal.
'colnel' or 'coronel' is spelled colonel but sounds like kernel
That is the correct spelling of "kernel" (a single corn seed, or a computer algorithm).The sound-alike word is the military rank colonel (O-6 in the US).
The spelling of the officer rank is "colonel" but the pronunciation (kernel) is derived from the equivalent rank coronel.
The homophone for "kernel" is "colonel."
The homophone of "colonel" is "kernel." Both words are pronounced the same way but have different meanings.
The homophone word for "kernel" is "colonel."
A homophone of "kernel" is "colonel." Both words sound the same but have different meanings.
kernal and colonel
kernel
colonel.
colonel The homophone for kernel is colonel. 1. kernel: noun: the edible content of a nut, fruit, or vegetable stone; the grain of a cereal that contains a seed and husk. The kernel of the corn tasted sweet. 2. colonel: noun: military rank; honorary title A colonel is an officer in the armed forces.
Colonel
"Kernel" and "colonel" are homophones, meaning they sound the same but have different meanings. "Kernel" typically refers to the softer, edible part of a seed or nut, while "colonel" is a military rank above a lieutenant colonel and below a brigadier general.
The homonym for "colonel" is "kernel." Both words are pronounced the same but have different meanings - "colonel" refers to a military rank, while "kernel" refers to the softer, usually edible part of a seed or nut.
a synonym means the same, so i depends on what word you are talking about. so kernel could be a synonym to any word that means kernel so.... if that is what you meant than yes it is a synonym to some word on thesaurus.com .