"Story" typically refers to a narrative or a level of a building, while "storey" is mainly used in British English to refer to a level of a building. For example, "The library has five stories," or "The apartment building has ten storeys."
Mr. Storey told quite a story.
The bedroom was on the top storey
The homophone for "story" is "storey".
A 47-storey building fell down in New York city. The question is why.
"Storey" is a homophone for "story." It refers to a level of a building.
A storybook is spelled "story." Floors on a building are spelled "story" in the US, or "storey" in the UK.
A single storey house is a house with only one story or level in it.
The homophone for "story" is "storey."
The homonyms for "story" are "storey" and "starry".
Love story is the story which feel love between the two object
No, it is not. The word storeys is a plural noun, more than one storey (floor) of a home or building.(in the US, it is spelled stories, the plural of story)* the singular, storey, can form compound adjectives such as two-storey or multi-storey
The surname 'Story' is a variant of the name 'Storey' Storey is a Northern English surname derived from the Old Norse 'Stóri' or 'stórr' meaning 'big'.