Whose - possessive pronoun meaning belonging to whom.
The homophone of "profit" is "prophet."
The homophone for asleep is a-s-l-e-e-p.
Cease does not have a Homophone. You may be thinking Seize, but this is a homophone of Seas or Sees. Cease is pronounced differently where the "S" is stressed and not pronounced as a "Zee".
A homophone for "loot" is "lute," which is a musical instrument with a rounded body and a flat front.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
The homophone of "profit" is "prophet."
The homophone for asleep is a-s-l-e-e-p.
Cease does not have a Homophone. You may be thinking Seize, but this is a homophone of Seas or Sees. Cease is pronounced differently where the "S" is stressed and not pronounced as a "Zee".
Lute
Sole
A homophone for "loot" is "lute," which is a musical instrument with a rounded body and a flat front.
A synonym for "pray" with no s in prey, but the synonym for "prays" with a s is praise
The homophone for core is corps. (the p and s are silent) Example sentence: He joined the US Marine Corps after finishing his college degree.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Burrow is reasonably near in pronunciation if you are British, and much closer if you are American. If you concede that, then burro would also count.
Him is the homophone for hymn.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.