No, hail and hell are not homophones. Hail is frozen precipitation that falls from the sky, while hell refers to a place of punishment or torment in some religious beliefs.
The homophone is hail as in when it rains with ice
A homophone for "hail" is "hale" which means healthy or strong.
I dont know... Go ask your teacher.
In some dialects, "hearty." hale, hail
Well if you say it in a correct English accent they are not homophones, hail sounds more like "hale" and hell has more of a "e". Or, to be more accurate, "hail" has a long "a" and "hell" has a short "e".
The homophone is hail as in when it rains with ice
A homophone for "hail" is "hale" which means healthy or strong.
It's hale
I dont know... Go ask your teacher.
In some dialects, "hearty." hale, hail
Well if you say it in a correct English accent they are not homophones, hail sounds more like "hale" and hell has more of a "e". Or, to be more accurate, "hail" has a long "a" and "hell" has a short "e".
hail
A homophone for bail is bale. Bail refers to the release of a person awaiting trial, while bale refers to a bundle of goods, like hay or paper.
gap, goblet, hail, helmet, hell,
"Hell" in German, means "bright" in English as in well lit or lots of sunshine.
hair, hatred, heat, hell, hamburger, hail, hill, hand, hare, hut, hip, hiker, hint,
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.