No, because they aren't spelt the same they don't start with the same letter.
One of two or more words that have the same spelling but differ in origin, meaning, and sometimes pronunciation, such as fair (pleasing in appearance) and fair (market) or wind (wĭnd) and wind (wīnd).
Site and cite
sight Nothing is as beautiful as the sight of a new born baby. cite When you write a reseach paper, cite your sources in a bibliography.
No, The I has a long I sound as in the homophones site and sight. The E is silent.
The homophone that means location is "site." "Cite" means to quote or refer to a source, and "sight" refers to the ability to see.
Site is a homonym. It sounds the same but is spelled differently. If you need a rhyming word, read on.the answer is kiteexample: my sister went to a park she flyed her kite.
i have found a site to cite
You cite examples. A site is a location. And sight is what your eyes provide.
cite
cite is to quote or refer to a passage of text whereas site is a location
Site and cite
sight Nothing is as beautiful as the sight of a new born baby. cite When you write a reseach paper, cite your sources in a bibliography.
No, The I has a long I sound as in the homophones site and sight. The E is silent.
The homophone that means location is "site." "Cite" means to quote or refer to a source, and "sight" refers to the ability to see.
This site was created in 2020.
It is cite...not site
Have is not a homograph.
Homograph