pale pail
Pail is a word meaning bucket. The homophone for pail is pale (meaning very light in color).
pail, pale
Homophones for "bucket" could be "bouquet" or "buck it" and for "light colored" it could be "lightly colored" or "light collar'd".
The pair of homophones meaning bucket and light-colored are pail and pale
A homophone for the word "carrot" is "carat." The two words sound the same but have different meanings - "carrot" refers to a vegetable, while "carat" is a unit of measurement for the weight of precious stones.
A homophone for "jewel" is "joule." Both words are pronounced the same but have different meanings - jewel refers to a precious stone or gem, while joule is a unit of energy.
Oh, dude, the homophone for carrot is "karat." It's like how you can have a karat of gold or a carrot in your salad. So, next time you're talking about precious metals or veggies, just remember, they sound the same but are totally different things.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Him is the homophone for hymn.
Bucket 1 Bucket 2 Bucket 3 Bucket 4 Bucket 5 Bucket 5 Bucket 7 Bucket 8 Bucket 9 Bucket 10 Bucket 11 Bucket 12 Bucket 13 Bucket 14 Bucket 15 Bucket 16 Bucket 17 Bucket 18 Bucket 19 Bucket 20
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
the homophone for stationery is stationary