A Japanese conifer = yew
A female sheep = ewe
The homonym for a female sheep and an evergreen tree is "ewe."
The homophone for you is "ewe". Homonyms are words that are spelled and pronounced the same but have different meanings.
One homophone of "you" is "ewe," which refers to a female sheep.
There aren't any homonyms for the word you, but there are homophones: ewe yew
heir/air (NOT hair!)
the answer is ewe
The homonym for a female sheep and an evergreen tree is "ewe."
The homophone for you is "ewe". Homonyms are words that are spelled and pronounced the same but have different meanings.
One homophone of "you" is "ewe," which refers to a female sheep.
There aren't any homonyms for the word you, but there are homophones: ewe yew
heir/air (NOT hair!)
A true homonym comprises two or more words with the same spelling and same pronunciation but different meanings, for example palm (tree) and palm (part of hand). However, a loser meaning is words that sound the same. These are properly called homophones and not homonyms. In the case of ewe, they could be yew or you.
A female sheep is called a ewe. There's a beautiful Japanese yew plant in her yard.
The homonyms for the second person pronoun 'you' are yew, a word for a type of coniferous tree, and ewe, a word for a female sheep.
The palindrome associated with sheep is the female, the "ewe."
the definition of rachel is ewe in Hebrew or lamb in English so in Japanese if you go by sound it would be reicheru but you would be called kohistuji
The homophone for ewe is you.