It is salary. It doesn't sound the same but it is near enough
Salary. Change the e's in celery and it sounds like salary.
Sandy shore: A beach is a sandy shore near an ocean or a lake. Kind of a tree: A birch is a type of tree with thin white bark.
* The words "caught" are "court" are considered homophones in the UK and Australia, where both are pronounced (kawt).In US English, there is no homophone for "caught" (usually kawt, rhymes with taught, for which there is a homophone, taut).Some dialect rhymes or near rhymes are:- court (US kort)- cot (US kott), a small bed- cawed, what the crows did
The word may be one of these:close - near, or to shutclause - a grammatical form, or codicil
The word sought is likely one of these near-homophones:Shirley - female given namesurely - certainly, of course
Salary. Change the e's in celery and it sounds like salary.
There are near-homophones (sound-alike words) that are plural nouns:pitchers - drink containers, or baseball throwerspictures - drawn art (paintings) or photos
if you are talking about the money underneath the varrock bank near the grand exchange, you have to position yourself correctly by the gate and use the telekinetic grab spell.
The word "suite" is often pronounced (correctly or incorrectly) as suit, rhymes with boot, when describing furniture. The near-homophone for suit is soot, which has a short OO as in foot.
approcher
This is a Synonym since two different words meaning the same or near the same thing is a Synonym.
The word for close is spelled "near".
it is spelled Tennessee
Add o near end tomorrow
Those letters spell near and earn.
That is the correct spelling of depend (count on, or contingent).(The near-homophone is deepened, made deeper)
near, frank,ben, jam