Yes. Badgers are hairy animals.
The homophone for "cut off" is "cutoff".
A homophone is a word spelt differently which sounds the same (i.e which and witch / where and wear / through and threw) and I can't think of - and don't there IS - a word that is trulyhomophonic to 'off'. A common mistake is to miss the final 'f' to spell 'of' instead. Is it definitely a homophone you want?
The coach blew the whistle.The wind blew his hat right off his head.
He was able to escape because he pried the cuffs off with his teeth.
Pear and Pare. Pear being the fruit and to pare means to shave off the outer layer of skin or covering.
The homophone for "cut off" is "cutoff".
A homophone is a word spelt differently which sounds the same (i.e which and witch / where and wear / through and threw) and I can't think of - and don't there IS - a word that is trulyhomophonic to 'off'. A common mistake is to miss the final 'f' to spell 'of' instead. Is it definitely a homophone you want?
pare, pair
The coach blew the whistle.The wind blew his hat right off his head.
He was able to escape because he pried the cuffs off with his teeth.
pare, pair
i dont kknow.. bug off noob
pare, pair
Pear and Pare. Pear being the fruit and to pare means to shave off the outer layer of skin or covering.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
noun. pear- "He grabbed a pear off of the tree to eat as a snack."
Him is the homophone for hymn.