The rock band was banned for shouting obscenities at the concert.
What
rock
A bored board is a piece of wood that has nothing to do.
Bob, you can eat that pear only if there is a pair of them for me and you.
"A pair" is a collective noun used as a singular noun. Thus, it would be correct to say, "A pair ... is ..."
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.
No, the word 'pair' is a noun (pair, pairs) and a verb (pair, pairs, pairing, paired).Examples:A pair of stone lions guarded the entrance of the museum. (noun)A new employee is paired with a senior employee to learn the job. (verb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Example:A pair of stone lions guarded the entrance of the museum. They were very impressive.(the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'pair' in the second sentence)
The homophone pair that fits the sentence is "altitude" and "attitude." The sentence would read: The higher airplane altitude seems attitude to me.
they're there
scent is used. I sent my friend in letter.
The homophone of couple is "hobble."
She walked away from the wild party because she's a shy person.
Base bass is the homophone pair meaning villainous singer
pear
The homophone of "pair" is "pear."
The homophone for "couple" is "couple". It is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different spelling and meaning.
The homophone pair is told (informed) / tolled (rang bell)
The homophone pair meaning a wildcat's chain parts is "lynx links."
dense