Sew, as in "She sews most of her own clothes."
The homonym of "sew" is "so." They are pronounced the same but have different meanings.
The homonym for sew is so.Examples:Can you sew on a button for me?Please be quiet so I can sleep.
Through is the homophone for threw. Example sentence: The pig walked through the mud.
"Drenched" does not have a homonym.
A homonym is a word that shares pronunciation or spelling with another word, but has a different meaning. So in this case a homonym for "heard" would be "herd".
The homonym of "sew" is "so." They are pronounced the same but have different meanings.
A homonym is a word that is spelled differently from the given word, but sounds the same. So a homonym for "gnu" is "new".
The homonym for sew is so.Examples:Can you sew on a button for me?Please be quiet so I can sleep.
A homonym is a word that is spelled differently but sounds the same. So it could be "team."
Recently acquired means new, and a homonym is a word that sounds the same, so a homonym for recently acquired or new is gnu (pronounced "new").
A homonym is the same a a homophone (a word that sounds the exact same as the other word but is spelt differently). So, a homonym for we've is weave (I weaved a basket).
Through is the homophone for threw. Example sentence: The pig walked through the mud.
"Drenched" does not have a homonym.
A homonym is a word that shares pronunciation or spelling with another word, but has a different meaning. So in this case a homonym for "heard" would be "herd".
binned. I binned the folder together so nothing fell out.
will could be i WILL do it or it could be for example, "she was held against her WILL" so yah :)
He missed the bus so I drove him to school.