a homonym is a word that is spelt and sounds exactly the same.
here is an example
Fall - to fall down
Fall - another name for the season, autumn
they both look the same and sound the same, but they dont mean the same
fall is an example of what homonym fall is an example of what homonym
A homonym for "fall" is "faul," which sounds the same but has a different meaning.
The homonym that could mean a journey or a fall is the word "trip".
An example of a homonym for happy is "haply," which means by chance or luck.
A homonym is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but has a different meaning or spelling. For example, "week" can be a homonym as it sounds the same as "weak".
fall is an example of what homonym fall is an example of what homonym
A homonym for "fall" is "faul," which sounds the same but has a different meaning.
The homonym that could mean a journey or a fall is the word "trip".
An example of a homonym for happy is "haply," which means by chance or luck.
A homonym is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but has a different meaning or spelling. For example, "week" can be a homonym as it sounds the same as "weak".
A train station is an example.
A synonym for homonym is homograph, which are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings and pronunciations.
Actually "their" is a homophone for "there". Homonyms must have the same spelling and pronunciation but different meanings. An example is palm - part of you hand or a tree.There is no homonym for there.
will could be i WILL do it or it could be for example, "she was held against her WILL" so yah :)
Through is the homophone for threw. Example sentence: The pig walked through the mud.
The homonym for would is wood.Example sentence: The furniture is made of beautiful, dark wood.There are two homonyms for do.One is dew. Example sentence: Each morning, the grass is covered with dew.The other is due. Example sentences: The assignment is due next week.You're due for a dental checkup next month.
A homonym is a word that sounds identical to another word in speech, but has a different meaning. For example, "two" and "too". One is a number, the other means "also". (This example is specifically a "homophone", but there is another kind of homonym called a "homograph", where the word looks the same but is not necessarily pronounced the same and means differently.) "Demolish" only has one meaning/word/sound. It doesn't have a homonym.