The senate _______ ran with the _______ of paper.
The answer is "page". A page is someone who runs errands for members of congress.
She read three novels last month. I like to read the paper every morning.
The homograph for a glass container is "jar," while the homograph for a rattle is "shake."
The homograph of "end" is "end" as in "the end of the movie." The homograph of "ship" is "ship" as in "a container ship." The homograph of "severe" is "severe" as in "a severe storm." The homograph of "harsh" is "harsh" as in "harsh criticism."
Content is a homograph, as it has the same spelling but different meanings and pronunciations. A homograph is a word that is spelled the same as another word but has a different meaning.
One sentence is for tear. The first sentence for tear is: There was a Tear running down my face. The second sentence is: My paper had a tear in it. There you go!
Just before he ran for president, he ran for Senate.
A side of the paper is a page. Page does not have a homophone. There is another meaning for page -- a young employee who runs errands. That makes page a homograph.
Homograph
Have is not a homograph.
Churchill
He ran for the U.S. Senate and lost. It was the first and only political race he had ever lost. By all accounts, he ran a poor campaign, and although he lost, he later said he learned a lot from it. He returned to the Illinois state senate, and when he ran for the U.S. senate again in 2004, he won.
She read three novels last month. I like to read the paper every morning.
homograph homograph homograph homograph
New York
obviously, it is homograph.
The homograph for a glass container is "jar," while the homograph for a rattle is "shake."
Lincoln never held a seat in the US Senate, but he ran for it in 1858 against Douglas.