Money bank and the bank of a river or something like that!
A word that is spelled the same with two different meanings is called a homonym.
The term for two words that look the same but have different meanings and pronunciations is "heteronym."
homograph. these are words which are written in the same way but have different meanings.
The word you are looking for is "pun." A pun is a play on words that relies on a word's multiple meanings or on two words that sound similar but have different meanings.
Different meanings for CBA include the Chinese Basketball Association, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Chaicago Bar Association, Center for Bits and Atoms (at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology), and cost-benefit analysis.
A word that is spelled the same with two different meanings is called a homonym.
The term for two words that look the same but have different meanings and pronunciations is "heteronym."
homograph. these are words which are written in the same way but have different meanings.
No, they have two different meanings
none
The word you are looking for is "pun." A pun is a play on words that relies on a word's multiple meanings or on two words that sound similar but have different meanings.
Different meanings for CBA include the Chinese Basketball Association, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Chaicago Bar Association, Center for Bits and Atoms (at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology), and cost-benefit analysis.
A homograph has the same spelling with different meanings, maybe different sound. A homonym has the same sound and may have the same spelling, with different meanings.
A sentence that can be read with two different meanings is called ambiguous. It can be interpreted in more than one way depending on how the words are understood.
A word that has two meanings is called a homonym. These words sound alike or are spelled alike but have different meanings.
"to," "two," and "too" are homophones because they sound the same but have different meanings. "hear" and "here" are homophones as they are pronounced the same but have different spellings and meanings. "knight" and "night" are homophones since they have the same pronunciation but different meanings and spellings.
No it isn't; the two words have entirely different meanings.