The homophone for a garland of flowers is "wreath," and the homophone for to entwine is "wreathe." So next time you're feeling fancy and want to talk about floral decorations or twisting things together, now you know the right words to use. Keep it classy, my friend.
The homophone for a garland of flowers is "wreath." "To entwine" has a homophone which is "twine."
A garland of flowers can be called a wreath. When you entwine something together you wreathe it.
The homophones for "a garland of flowers" are "lei" and "lay". The homophones for "to entwine" are "intwine" and "in twine".
wreathe/wreath * * * * * A homophone is another word that sounds the same but has a different spelling. I cannot work out how wreathe nor wreath can be made to sound like entwine.
There isn't any. Unless you count the slurred pronunciation when your bottle of Merlot is empty: "endwine"! Or if you are a big fan of Lord of the Rings, you could imagine a wine that is made by the Ents, called Ent Wine.
The homophone for a garland of flowers is "wreath." "To entwine" has a homophone which is "twine."
A garland of flowers can be called a wreath. When you entwine something together you wreathe it.
wreath and wreathe
wreath and wreathe
The homophones for "a garland of flowers" are "lei" and "lay". The homophones for "to entwine" are "intwine" and "in twine".
i need you to tell me because i dont know
lei
wreathe &wreath
The homophone of LEI is LAY.
wreathe/wreath * * * * * A homophone is another word that sounds the same but has a different spelling. I cannot work out how wreathe nor wreath can be made to sound like entwine.
A decorative garland of flowers is a lei.
There isn't any. Unless you count the slurred pronunciation when your bottle of Merlot is empty: "endwine"! Or if you are a big fan of Lord of the Rings, you could imagine a wine that is made by the Ents, called Ent Wine.