There are a great many homophones. Homophones (sound-alike words) are words that are spelled differently and have different meanings, but sound the same when spoken aloud. Some examples are aloud/allowed, bear/bare, patience/patients and verses/versus.
Here are some homophones (a mostly different 100 at the related question):
cue, a signal
queue, which means a long line of people
staid which is often self-restraint
stayed which is the past tense of stay
karat, a unit of fineness of gold
carat, a weight of gems
carrot, an orange vegetable.
manor, a landed estate
manner, a way of acting.
(more - and see the related question)
(see related sentence question and links)
night and knight
Chile / chillyGreece / grease
Some examples of triple homophones include "flower/flour/flower," "write/right/rite," and "cell/sell/sail."
Words that sound alike but are spelled differently and have different meanings are called homophones. Some examples of homophones include "their" and "there," "to" and "too," and "hear" and "here."
Examples of homophones include "to/too/two," "its/it's," "there/their/they're," and "hear/here." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings or spellings.
night and knight
Chile / chillyGreece / grease
Some examples of triple homophones include "flower/flour/flower," "write/right/rite," and "cell/sell/sail."
Words that sound alike but are spelled differently and have different meanings are called homophones. Some examples of homophones include "their" and "there," "to" and "too," and "hear" and "here."
Examples of homophones include "to/too/two," "its/it's," "there/their/they're," and "hear/here." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings or spellings.
Some homophones for there are their and they're.
Words that sound the same but have different meanings are called homophones. Some examples include "there," "their," and "they're."
Some examples are "sea" and "see," "right" and "write," "ate" and "eight," and "flower" and "flour." These are known as homophones.
Some examples of words that are spelled differently but sound the same include "two," "to," and "too," as well as "there," "their," and "they're." These are known as homophones.
Some examples of words that sound the same but have different meanings are "there," "their," and "they're"; "to," "two," and "too"; and "bare" and "bear." These words are known as homophones.
Homophones are words that sound alike but have different meanings. There aren't necessarily "5 parts" of homophones, but they are typically distinct words with different spellings that are pronounced the same way. Some examples include "to," "too," and "two."
fairy and ferry maid and maid meet and meat write and right see the pix.