Hmm... speakers with British accents may say flaw and floor closely enough to be considered homonyms.
A homonym for house would be "browse" as it sounds the same but has a different meaning.
The homonym for "quietness" is "piece".
Leak; this is when a liquid (esp. water) drips out because of a fault or hole in the container. Drip.
Not every word has a homophone and homophones cannot be 'made up'. Quietness and part don't have a homophone.
root as in the part of a plant that is underground
A homonym for house would be "browse" as it sounds the same but has a different meaning.
The homonym for "quietness" is "piece".
Leak; this is when a liquid (esp. water) drips out because of a fault or hole in the container. Drip.
Not every word has a homophone and homophones cannot be 'made up'. Quietness and part don't have a homophone.
root as in the part of a plant that is underground
Actually "their" is a homophone for "there". Homonyms must have the same spelling and pronunciation but different meanings. An example is palm - part of you hand or a tree.There is no homonym for there.
The word "bow" is both a homophone and a homonym. As a homophone, it sounds the same as "bough" and "beau." As a homonym, it has different meanings such as a type of knot and the front part of a ship.
The homonym of "live" is "live." It can be pronounced differently depending on its usage - as in "live music" (pronounced 'liv') and "I live in a house" (pronounced 'lyv').
Nobody's Fault - House - was created on 2012-02-06.
A homonym for knows is nose. Another homonym is noes. The nose is a body part, noes is the plural of no and knows is the conjugation of the verb, to know. Knows and nose have the same pronunciation, but different spelling.
I think it might be waste / waist
heart OR smart OR mart(e.g. Wal-Mart)