Homophone word of cot is
A homophone to "cot" is "caught." Both words sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
A homophone for "captured" is "raptured."
Yes, the homophone for coat is cote but it can also be pronounced as cot.
* The words "caught" are "court" are considered homophones in the UK and Australia, where both are pronounced (kawt).In US English, there is no homophone for "caught" (usually kawt, rhymes with taught, for which there is a homophone, taut).Some dialect rhymes or near rhymes are:- court (US kort)- cot (US kott), a small bed- cawed, what the crows did
A homophone for the words captured and trapped is ensnared.
In British dialects, the homophone is "court" (cawt).There is no homophone in US English : "court" is (cort).The 3-letter near-rhyme is "cot" (caht) which in some dialects sounds like court as well.
cot, caught
Synonyms of "trapped" or "captured" could include ensnared, confined, or incarcerated. A homophone of "trapped" could be wrapped.
That is the correct spelling of the noun cot, meaning a small, short, or temporary bed.It is a near-homophone for the verb caught (cawt - past tense of to catch).
A homophone for coats is cotes. The first, coat, is an article of clothing that is usually worn as an outer layer. The second, cote, is a shed or coop for small domestic animals. Homophones are words that sound alike but have different meanings.
what the definition of COT code and should I pay the bank for it?