Sett
The homophone of sett is set. Sett can also mean a burrow, and borough is a homophone for burrow.
A homophone pair is a set of words that sound the same but have different meanings, such as "there" and "their."
The homophones for "not heavy" and "set fire to" are "light" and "lite."
The homophone for "choir" is "quire", which means a set of four sheets of paper folded together to make eight leaves.
A homophone triplet is when three words are homophones. Examples include: there/they're/their and to/too/two.
The homophone of sett is set. Sett can also mean a burrow, and borough is a homophone for burrow.
A homophone pair is a set of words that sound the same but have different meanings, such as "there" and "their."
The homophones for "not heavy" and "set fire to" are "light" and "lite."
The homophone for "choir" is "quire", which means a set of four sheets of paper folded together to make eight leaves.
A homophone triplet is when three words are homophones. Examples include: there/they're/their and to/too/two.
set, wet, pet, get, fret, net, let, vet
The homophone for wrote is rote. Rote means an automatic set of activities.
The homophone for someone who protects a king is "knight." This word sounds the same as "night," which refers to the time of day when the sun has set and it is dark outside.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Pear = noun, a tree of the genus PyrusPair = noun, a set of two things
Him is the homophone for hymn.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.