to travel
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.
"Drenched" does not have a homonym.
Hour is a homonym for our.
"Sweet" is a homonym for "suite."
Was is a linking verb. It does not have a homonym.
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.
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.
"Drenched" does not have a homonym.
Hour is a homonym for our.
"Sweet" is a homonym for "suite."
Was is a linking verb. It does not have a homonym.
"Senses" is a homonym for "census."
The homonym for "mourning" is "morning".
The homonym for chord is cord.
The homonym for sauce is source :)
Homonym for grays is graze
The homonym for vale is veil.