Biscuit
That's the only one I can think of, sorry.
Centre, humour, labour, sabre, aeroplane, metre. -Those are all in "English" .
Same meaning just different spelling. Favorite is American spelling, favourite is British spelling
A word that has the same meaning but is spelled differently is "color" (American English) and "colour" (British English). Both words refer to the same concept of the visual appearance resulting from the way an object reflects or emits light.
jam
No. "Practise" is the British spelling of the verb "to practise". In North America the same verb is used with exactly the same meaning but with a slightly different spelling :"to practice". The noun "practice" on the other hand is spelled in both British and American English identically.
A cheque is British English for a check in American English.
No; as opposites, tight and loose are examples of antonyms.Tight (meaning restrictive) and tight (meaning drunk) are homonyms, as would be right and write. A homonym is a word that sounds or is spelled the same, but has a completely different meaning.
The British spelling is "squash" and the American spelling is also "squash." Both countries use the same spelling for this word.
If you wrote it down, then you know how to spell it. answer: British spelling:labour; American spelling: labor.
A British billion is equal to an American billion in modern use.(Formerly, a British billion used to be equal to a US Trillion)
You might mean homonyms. Homonyms are different words that sound the same but have different meaning. Examples are: two and too, bite and bight, ball and bawl.
Examples of semantics include the study of meaning in language, analyzing the relationships between words and their meanings, investigating how context influences meaning, and exploring how different languages express similar concepts.