No, fair is an adjective, meaning okay or passable. Fare is a noun, meaning a payment.
The word 'fare' is a noun (fare, fares) and a verb(fare, fares, faring, fared).The noun 'fare' is a word for:the amount of money paid for public transportation;a passenger of public transportation;the food provided or available.
Fare is like money related and fair is like a festive event
60.80
Cautious IS an adjective. An adjective is an action!
Giraffe
The word 'fare' is a noun (fare, fares) and a verb(fare, fares, faring, fared).The noun 'fare' is a word for:the amount of money paid for public transportation;a passenger of public transportation;the food provided or available.
(Fair and fare are homophones, sound-alike words, which can contributes to misspelling.)(adjective-noun)"He did not think it was fair that he pay a bus fare for his dog."(noun-noun)"The railroad offered a reduced fare for travel to the county fair."
The "homonyms" for fare are its two meanings:1) a charge for transportation2) the food provided at a location or in a regionThe "homophone" (sound-alike word) is fair, which is also a homonym meaning:1) honest and just (adjective)2) a celebration or gathering (noun)
It is "How did you fare in the exam?"
A homophone for "fare" is "fair".
Fare
The plural form of bill of fare is bills of fare.
The home phone of fare is fair.
Fare
Fare for journey originating outside India is known as SOTO Fare
It can be (to fare). But it can also be a noun.
yes other wise it cant really be called fare trade