The plant's root system was complex and extensive, making it challenging to route the new irrigation system around them.
An homonym for "route" is "root", which sounds the same but has a different meaning.
root as in the part of a plant that is underground
root To rid the lawn of dandylions, you must pull each one up by its root.
it is : ROOT- ROUTE
The homophone for "root" is "route."
An homonym for "route" is "root", which sounds the same but has a different meaning.
route
root as in the part of a plant that is underground
root To rid the lawn of dandylions, you must pull each one up by its root.
Root; you tried to get to the root of the problem, meaning the bottom or cause of the problem.
hom
The homonym for "route" is "root." While "route" typically refers to a path or course taken to reach a destination, "root" can refer to the part of a plant that anchors it in the soil or the fundamental source of something. Despite their different meanings, they are pronounced the same way in some dialects, making them homonyms.
hom
The sentence has one error, the word route means 'the way to get from one place to another', the correct word for the sentence is root meaning 'origin, source, or base'. The correct sentence should read:You tried to get to the root of the problem.
it is : ROOT- ROUTE
homo = same zygon = ox yoke
The homophone for "root" is "route."