heal
The homophone for "heel" is "heal."
I dont know... Go ask your teacher.
One homophone for "feel" is "heel". It sounds the same but has a different spelling and meaning.
There's, theirs we'll, wheel he'll, heel, heal
The homophone for "hill" is "hil." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. In this case, "hill" refers to a raised area of land, while "hil" is not a standard English word and does not have a defined meaning.
The homophone for "heel" is "heal."
Heel is a homophone for heal. Heal is a synonym for cure.
The word cure doesn't have a homophone. Heal is another word for cure, and its homophone is heel
I dont know... Go ask your teacher.
One homophone for "feel" is "heel". It sounds the same but has a different spelling and meaning.
Exactly what I said to my sick sheep: "Ewe heal."
There's, theirs we'll, wheel he'll, heel, heal
it's Heel not hell any way its a mule
The homophone for "hill" is "hil." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. In this case, "hill" refers to a raised area of land, while "hil" is not a standard English word and does not have a defined meaning.
No, hail and hell are not homophones. Hail is frozen precipitation that falls from the sky, while hell refers to a place of punishment or torment in some religious beliefs.
Yes. The EA pair in heal has a long E sound as in meal and steal. The homophone is "heel."
I'm a tar heel born i am a tar heel heel bred and when I die I'm a tar heel dead. so its Ra Ra Carolina Ra Ra Carolina Ra Ra Ra go to hell duke