A homonym is a word that shares pronunciation or spelling with another word, but has a different meaning. So in this case a homonym for "foul" would be "fowl".
Foul means bad, or to commit an offense, or affecting a ship's hull or propeller.Fowl means certain birds (wildfowl).After the oil spill, several fowl were cleaned of the foul substance.
Fell is the past tense of the verb to fall.It also means a hill - as in the fells.So the pair of homophones are spelt identically.
Some homophones for there are their and they're.
Homophones for "ware" are "wear" and "where."
Wok is the homophones of walk.
Foul means bad, or to commit an offense, or affecting a ship's hull or propeller.Fowl means certain birds (wildfowl).After the oil spill, several fowl were cleaned of the foul substance.
Fell is the past tense of the verb to fall.It also means a hill - as in the fells.So the pair of homophones are spelt identically.
Some homophones for there are their and they're.
Homophones for "ware" are "wear" and "where."
The homophones of "hello" are "hallo" and "hullo".
Wok is the homophones of walk.
Byte and bight are homophones for bite.
Homophones for "in that place" are "their" and "there." Homophones for "belonging to them" include "their" and "they're." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
The homophones for there are they're and their.
The homophones for "know" are "no" and "gnaw". The homophones for "nose" are "knows" and "nays".
The answer is no and know, which are homophones.
Yes, there are homophones in the French language. Homophones are words that are pronounced the same but have different meanings. For example, "verre" (glass) and "vert" (green) are homophones in French.