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I can provide a few examples of homonyms with sentences: Bark - The dog's bark was loud. Bat - She swung the baseball bat. Present - He gave her a present. She is present at the meeting.
I can provide a few examples of homonyms: bat (flying mammal) and bat (sports equipment), bear (animal) and bear (to carry), bow (weapon) and bow (to bend forward). Homonyms are words that are spelled or sound the same but have different meanings.
there are not so many homonyms.... but there are around 10-15.
No; as opposites, tight and loose are examples of antonyms.Tight (meaning restrictive) and tight (meaning drunk) are homonyms, as would be right and write. A homonym is a word that sounds or is spelled the same, but has a completely different meaning.
You can find homonyms in various dictionaries, language reference books, and online resources such as websites specifically focused on homonyms. Examples of homonyms include words like "bear" (the animal) and "bear" (to endure), or "bat" (a flying mammal) and "bat" (a sports equipment).
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the 100 examples of homonyms are 100
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I can provide a few examples of homonyms with sentences: Bark - The dog's bark was loud. Bat - She swung the baseball bat. Present - He gave her a present. She is present at the meeting.
I can provide a few examples of homonyms: bat (flying mammal) and bat (sports equipment), bear (animal) and bear (to carry), bow (weapon) and bow (to bend forward). Homonyms are words that are spelled or sound the same but have different meanings.
Homonyms refer to words that have different meanings and spelling but sound similar. Attention, infection and direction are examples of homonyms for affection.
i see the sea in the beach
This is not an English word. Please check your spelling and ask the question again with the correct word.
there are not so many homonyms.... but there are around 10-15.
No; as opposites, tight and loose are examples of antonyms.Tight (meaning restrictive) and tight (meaning drunk) are homonyms, as would be right and write. A homonym is a word that sounds or is spelled the same, but has a completely different meaning.
Two examples of homonyms in "Jane Eyre" are the homophones "right" and "write," as well as "sole" (meaning only) and "soul" (spiritual or immaterial part of a human being). These homonyms add to the richness of the language and can create subtle wordplay in the text.
1. hairy - harry2. marry - mary