angel
another answer
I couldn't find that in a dictionary. Please check your spelling.
Dalet (ד) is the 4th letter of the Hebrew alphabet. The name comes from the word "delet" (דלת) which means "door."
חידו doesn't appear to be a Hebrew word.
In Afrikaans: "vinnig" In German: "schnell" In Greek: "γρήγορος" (pronounced 'grigoros') and "ταχύς" (pronounced 'tahys') In Japanese: "速い" (pronounced 'hayaku')
There are two words that can mean "ape" in Spanish. They are "simio" and "mono." Simio is pronounced, "SEE-me-oh." Mono is pronounced, "MOW-no."
Et simply means and. It is pronounced similarly to the "ay" in words like bay, day, etc. (The T is not pronounced!)
The homograph in the words "cruel" and "glide" is the letter combination "i." In "cruel," the "i" is pronounced as /juː/, while in "glide," it is pronounced as /aɪ/.
While these words are sometimes called "homonyms" (same words), they are more accurately called homographs(same writing). The term homonym is more frequently applied to words that are spelled differently but sound the same (homophones). Homographs are often impossible to identify without context clues.Homographs often appear as noun/verb pairs such astear (crying) and tear (to rip)mean (cruel), mean (an average), and mean (defines)There is a large list of homograph examples at the related link.
"Pronounced" = mevuta
There are too many words that are pronounced as wang2 in Mandarin, it's quite impossible to determine which one exactly you are asking for.
A homophone is two or more words that are pronounced the same, but mean different things. So those are not homophones.
The same "ea" sound as in "mean" can be found in words like "bean," "clean," and "dream." These words all feature the long "e" sound pronounced as /iː/. Other examples include "scene" and "team."
How about the Hebrew words pronounced "yahl-DAH sheh-LEE" (ילדה שלי)? That would mean something like "my girl".