The homophone for "only" is "lonely."
The only one I can think of is mean
There is no homophone in English for "she", with the only sound-alike words being proper names or from another language.
Suite. I realize that only has five letters.
The word "accept" only has one homophone: "except." Both words are pronounced the same in some dialects, but they have different meanings, thus making them homophones.
The homophone of "grease" is "grease." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, and in this case, "grease" only has one spelling as both the verb and the noun.
The only one I can think of is mean
There is no homophone in English for "she", with the only sound-alike words being proper names or from another language.
A homophone for bookmark would be "book mark". It's still a homophone even though it is two words. That is the only homophone for bookmark.
In the American dialect, ant is the homophone for aunt. Everywhere else, there isn't any homophone for aunt.. The homonym only exists in Americanized accents.
Suite. I realize that only has five letters.
The word "accept" only has one homophone: "except." Both words are pronounced the same in some dialects, but they have different meanings, thus making them homophones.
The homophone of "grease" is "grease." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, and in this case, "grease" only has one spelling as both the verb and the noun.
Only if you think a bird says, "Cheep."
Vane & vain are the only ones I can think of.
Sent: I sent him to the store. Scent: That scent is lovely on you. Cent: This gum is only worth one cent.
LHOVED is the only one, and it hardly counts.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.