nose, noes
A homophone for "knows" is "nose."
Two English words that sound identical to the word "nose" but differ in spelling are "knows", the third-person of "know", and "nos", the plural of the word "no".
Ah, what a wonderful question. The homophone for "nose" is "knows." It's like a happy little coincidence in the English language, bringing a smile to our faces as we paint our words with different meanings. Remember, language is a beautiful landscape full of surprises and delights.
The homophones for "die" are "dye" and "dy" and for "nose" are "knows" and "gnose".
"What is the hairy bark of an evergreen?"
A homophone for "knows" is "nose."
Nose.
Nose
nose, noes
Mussel and muscle are homophones of each other. Muzzle can mean nose, which is a homophone of noes and knows.
Two English words that sound identical to the word "nose" but differ in spelling are "knows", the third-person of "know", and "nos", the plural of the word "no".
Ah, what a wonderful question. The homophone for "nose" is "knows." It's like a happy little coincidence in the English language, bringing a smile to our faces as we paint our words with different meanings. Remember, language is a beautiful landscape full of surprises and delights.
Jenny knows that she has cotton candy on her nose.
The homophones for "die" are "dye" and "dy" and for "nose" are "knows" and "gnose".
deer, gnu, knew, daze, noes
if u mean knows then its the body part nosee.g she has a long nose
"What is the hairy bark of an evergreen?"