Besides those two, there's Reid.
The homophone of "reed" is "read."
read u say it like red.
A homophone for "reed" is "read." Both words sound identical but have different meanings.
Last summer, he read the Harry Potter books. Enjoy the shiny, red apple. You'll learn to read in first grade. She needs a reed for her clarinet.
yes.Here are some examples:He read that book last night.Please stop at the red light.Please read the test before you begin.Can you play the saxophone if the reed is broken?
The homophone of "reed" is "read."
read u say it like red.
The homophone for reed is read.
read
A homophone for "reed" is "read." Both words sound identical but have different meanings.
Last summer, he read the Harry Potter books. Enjoy the shiny, red apple. You'll learn to read in first grade. She needs a reed for her clarinet.
reed, read
yes.Here are some examples:He read that book last night.Please stop at the red light.Please read the test before you begin.Can you play the saxophone if the reed is broken?
That is the color spelling of the color red.The homophone (sound-alike word) is the past tense of the verb to read, also read.
The homophones (sound-alike words) are read andreed, or read and red.The words read (present tense, reed) and read (past tense, red) are homographs, meaning they are written the same, not sounded the same.
Nope.Read in the past tense sounds like "red", with the "e" sound being the same as in "Fred" or "dead".In the present tense read sounds like "reed". This "e" sound is the same as in "need" or "seed"
The homonym of "reed" is "read," which can be pronounced the same way depending on the context. Reed refers to a type of tall, slender grass-like plant, while read is the past tense of the verb "to read," meaning to look at and understand written words.