Moan
A homophone for MOWN is MOAN.
The homophone for moan is mown.
No, "moan" and "mown" are not homophones. "Moan" is pronounced as /məʊn/ and means to make a long, low sound because of pain or unhappiness, whereas "mown" is pronounced as /məʊn/ or /moʊn/ and is the past participle of "mow," meaning to cut down grass with a tool.
Here are some homonyms for "mown": moan, loan, own.
A homonym for moan is "mown," which is the past participle of the verb "mow."
A homophone for MOWN is MOAN.
The homophone for moan is mown.
No, "moan" and "mown" are not homophones. "Moan" is pronounced as /məʊn/ and means to make a long, low sound because of pain or unhappiness, whereas "mown" is pronounced as /məʊn/ or /moʊn/ and is the past participle of "mow," meaning to cut down grass with a tool.
We have mown the grass.The pedestrian was mown down by the drink-driver.
Here are some homonyms for "mown": moan, loan, own.
A homonym for moan is "mown," which is the past participle of the verb "mow."
past participle is mowed or mown. mow mowed mowed/mown.
The homophones for "mown" are "moan" and "mourn." "Mown" is the past participle of the verb "mow," which means to cut down grass or crops with a machine or tool.
re-mown
The word mown's homonym is moan. A homonym is a word that has the same pronunciation or spelling of another word but has a different meaning.
Lawn/grass that is mown.
No.