in fact or in truth if you really want words but truly or certainly if you only want words
Absolutely, undoubtedly, certainly, truly, precisely, genuinely, honestly, indeed, literally, surely...
Homograph = words that are spelled the same but have different meanings.Homophone = Words that are spelled differently and mean different things, but sound the same (type of homonym).Homonym = Words that mean different things but sounds the same. Can have different or the same spelling.
I would think that things that mean the same as unique are the following: different, unusual, rare, one, uncommon.
Synonyms are words that mean the same thing such as stuff and things or thongs and flip flops
Synonyms mean the same but sound different (red, crimson). Homonyms sound the same but mean different things (which, witch). Homonyms include words which sound the same and are spelt the same but have different meanings (left: a direction, left:went away)
Those words are Homonyms! Because of them, we can have words like sail and sale, right and write, or even words spelled the same like nail and file, and have them sound the same while meaning completely different things.
words that mean the same as also
The words that indicate things that are not the same are different, dissimilar, or unlike. In comparisons, the word contrast refers to listing differences.Words that mean the opposite of each other are antonyms.
Snap, you can snap things together, like a button, but you can snap things apart, such as ropes and strings.
Some words are sanitation and sanitize but they mean the exact same thing.
Words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings are called homophones. Examples include "to," "two," and "too."
They could, although it is possible for 'gross' to mean a large quantity of, in which case they'd mean two different things.