Desert (which has two meanings):
A desert is a dry, normally sandy place.
They decided to desert the broken car.
The other is dessert:
Dessert:
For dessert we had chocolate ice cream.
desert
desert
desert, dessert
Sundae, a delicious ice cream dessert, is a homophone for Sunday.
Dessert is a homophone for desert, when "desert" means to abandon. The other homograph of "desert," meaning a dry place, doesn't have a homophone.
Dessert : Candy/cake. Desert: Hot dry land
Yes, a homophone can be a homograph. For instance "desert" is a homophone for "dessert" when desert has the meaning of abandon. Desert is also a homograph when it means both abandon, and a dry place.
A pair of homophones are dessert and desert, which have the same pronunciation but different meanings. Another pair is blight and bright, where the two words sound the same but have opposite meanings. Right and correct are another example, as they are pronounced the same but have slightly different meanings. Brake and break is another homophone pair, with different meanings but the same pronunciation.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Him is the homophone for hymn.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
the homophone for stationery is stationary