The correct spelling is Caribbean.
Some example sentences are:
We are going on a Caribbean cruise in a fortnight.
The Caribbean is a very hot place.
I enjoy Caribbean cuisine.
Words that have the same meaning but different spelling are called homophones. These words sound alike but are spelled differently and have different meanings. Examples include "bare" and "bear", "to" and "too", "write" and "right".
Words that have the same pronunciation but different spelling are called homophones.
no. you only need to capitalize it if it is a person or specific place.other than that spelling words should not be capitalized
If it's a type of frost, it's rime. If it's two words with the same basic structure but a different beginning sound (like cat and bat), it's rhyme.
One example of words that have the same spelling but different meanings and pronunciations is "tear." It can mean a drop of moisture or to rip something apart, and its pronunciation changes depending on the meaning.
Twentieth.
Sixth.
It is spelled: Seventeenth.
Get your spelling right, *a crop, two words not one.
The spelling is "ouch" (expression of pain or discomfort), as in the rhyming words couch and pouch.
The correct spelling is Pirates of the Caribbean.
Kokomo is the correct spelling of places in Hawaii and Indiana and an island in the Caribbean.
All words in Hebrew are spelled from right to left. Victor is ויקטור
The correct spelling is the 'Caribbean Sea'
It's correct but I would hyphenate the two words.
Yes but it's two separate words: grand finale.
The right spelling is atmosphere.