I want to take a course on how to make a bulletin board of cork and coarse fabric.
He is so coarse he should take a course in etiquette.
The sand trap on the Golf course is filled with coarse sand.
I will course my coarse coated Airedales at the field trials.
[Course is usually used as a noun but can also be used as a verb. Coarse is used as an adjective.]
Of course the language in the play is coarse; it's Mamet.
Of course the language in the play is coarse; it's Mamet.
The coarse sandpaper is perfect for smoothing rough surfaces. I signed up for a cooking course to improve my culinary skills.
The homonym for course is highlighted in the sentence below:Some animals have coarse fur, others have soft fur.
The homophone for "course" is "coarse."
Of course the language in the play is coarse; it's Mamet.
Of course the language in the play is coarse; it's Mamet.
A man with a coarse voice was doing the commentary on the public address systems as the runners entered the final stages of the course.
The coarse sandpaper is perfect for smoothing rough surfaces. I signed up for a cooking course to improve my culinary skills.
The homonym for course is highlighted in the sentence below:Some animals have coarse fur, others have soft fur.
Although the words coarse and course sound the same they have totally different meanings. Coarse is a type of texture and a course can be a lesson learned in school. The girl wanted to take a course in design using coarse types of fabric, is an example of how to use them both in a sentence.
The homophone for "course" is "coarse."
coarse course
The homophone for "course" is "coarse." "Course" refers to a direction or path, while "coarse" means rough in texture.
Example sentence(s) - The salt is coarse ground. She has long, coarse hair.
coarse The farmer brushed the horse's coarse hair.
A homophone for "coarse" is "course." They sound the same but have different meanings.