The teacher asked the class, "can anyone put a homophone in a sentence for me".
Synonym: stipulation Homophone: claws
The word bear is a homophone for bare.In a way, your question is a sentence that uses the actual word "homophone," but have a look at this dictionary definition: noun - one of a group of words pronounced in the same way but differing in meaning or spelling or both, as for example bear and bare.
The homophone for the word "whirred" would be the word "word."
The homophone for talk is torque, meaning to use a twisting force that causes machinery.A more likely candidate is tock, as in tick tock.Synonyms of talk include parley, which is a homophone for parlay and rap which is a homophone for wrap.
A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another but has a different meaning. The homophone for the word wood is would.
i'll have that aisle
The word "they're" is a homophone of the words "their" and "there". They might sound the same, but each has a different role in a sentence.
Their house is over there; they're not there.
Synonym: stipulation Homophone: claws
(*not to be confused with the homophone verb or noun "rails") Crackles or rales heard in the lungs can indicate a serious medical condition.
The word bear is a homophone for bare.In a way, your question is a sentence that uses the actual word "homophone," but have a look at this dictionary definition: noun - one of a group of words pronounced in the same way but differing in meaning or spelling or both, as for example bear and bare.
tinkle berry and PO TA TOE!
The homophone for the word "whirred" would be the word "word."
The homophone for talk is torque, meaning to use a twisting force that causes machinery.A more likely candidate is tock, as in tick tock.Synonyms of talk include parley, which is a homophone for parlay and rap which is a homophone for wrap.
The word "strawberry" has no homophone. The homophone of the word berry is bury.
A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another but has a different meaning. The homophone for the word wood is would.
No, the word beach is not a homophone. A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different meaning, such as "to," "two," and "too."