Two homophones for "pear" are "pare" and "pair."
Pair pear
pair
Homophones for "two alike fruit" include "pair" and "pear," while homophones for "cut off skin" include "peel" and "peal."
pair, pare, pear and pere are homophones
No, they are homophones.
The homophones for "to cut thin slices" are "pare" and "pear" (fruit).
Some two syllable homophones are:Weather and WhetherProfit and ProphetLesson and LessenIdle and Idol
Homonyms for pare are pair and pear. You can pare a pair of pears.
There are many homophones in English. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different spellings. Examples of homophones in English: to, two, too; pear, pare, pair; I eye, aye; bear, bare; row, roe; dear, deer. see, sea.
No. Homophones are words that sound the same, but are spelled differently (ex. pear, pair).
pear pare pere père paree
"There" and "They're" are two homophones for their.