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,
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
"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,