Yes, in some dialects. A better one is "pore."
It depends on your accent. If you say "poor" to rhyme with "snore" then "pour" is a homophone. But if you rhyme "poor" with "lure" or "tour" there is no homophone.paw
The answer is poor or pour.... Because a homophone is a word that sounds the same as another one but is spelled different.
idle, idol poor, pour
Pore (tiny openings in the skin) and pour (to transfer liquid from one container to another) are homophones.
Poor (below middle class) and Pour (to disperse liquid)
It depends on your accent. If you say "poor" to rhyme with "snore" then "pour" is a homophone. But if you rhyme "poor" with "lure" or "tour" there is no homophone.paw
The answer is poor or pour.... Because a homophone is a word that sounds the same as another one but is spelled different.
idle, idol poor, pour
In some dialects, "pour."
Pore (tiny openings in the skin) and pour (to transfer liquid from one container to another) are homophones.
Poor (below middle class) and Pour (to disperse liquid)
Please pour some milk into her cup. The money collected at church is given to poor families right here in our community.
Corps
pure
pore
O sound words : door, floor, and in some dialects poor(US homophone is pour, not pore).
In some places, "pour."