1. The mail man came by, so the male went to go get it.
2. The rose sat in the rows of chairs.
3. There was a deer that wrote a letter starting with dear.
4. I had a cell phone that is for sell.
5. There was a sail ship that was for sale.
Sure! The queen wore a clean gown to the ball.
This is a sentence that utilizes the homophones flour and flower.
The postal worker who delivers my mail is male.
Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, making them tricky for those learning English as a second language to distinguish and use correctly in written or verbal communication.
Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. Examples include: "For" and "four" "Their," "there," and "they're" "To," "too," and "two" "Flower" and "flour" "Heal" and "heel"
Sure! The queen wore a clean gown to the ball.
Weather and whether area homophones.
This is a sentence that utilizes the homophones flour and flower.
The postal worker who delivers my mail is male.
They're playing with their toys over there.
We planted a beech by the beach.
Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, making them tricky for those learning English as a second language to distinguish and use correctly in written or verbal communication.
Pore
There are two pairs of homophones in that sentence...In and InnDaze and Days
I 'need' to 'knead' the biscuit dough.
Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. Examples include: "For" and "four" "Their," "there," and "they're" "To," "too," and "two" "Flower" and "flour" "Heal" and "heel"
It contains homophones: the, thee miner, minor in, inn Desert is a homograph.