which
Witch is a homophone for which.
The homophone for "which" is "witch."
The homophone for "state of the air" is "weather," and for "which of two" is "witch of two."
'Witch' is a femle sorceress. (evil wizard). 'Which' is to makle a question . It starts a sentence, which ends with a question mark '?'.
No, it is not a preposition. The word witch is a noun, a person.(the homophone which is a pronoun, relative pronoun, or conjunction)
Witch is a homophone for which.
The homophone for "which" is "witch."
witch of the to
The answer is which, but you mean homophone, not homonym.
The homophone for "state of the air" is "weather," and for "which of two" is "witch of two."
She went to the Halloween party dressed as a witch.
'Witch' is a femle sorceress. (evil wizard). 'Which' is to makle a question . It starts a sentence, which ends with a question mark '?'.
No, it is not a preposition. The word witch is a noun, a person.(the homophone which is a pronoun, relative pronoun, or conjunction)
Yes, it does. "Which" is more correct than "witch."
Yes. "Which" is more correct than "witch."
The homophones for the phrase "The plain witch flu bye was noisy" are: plane/plain, which/witch, flu/flew, by/bye, and no/knows.
The correct spelling is which. For example: Which way should I go?The spelling "witch" is a person (traditionally a woman) who casts spells or uses magic.