A homophone is a type of homonym.
Tee and ti are homophones of tea.
The homophone for wrote is rote. Rote means an automatic set of activities.
In the American dialect, ant is the homophone for aunt. Everywhere else, there isn't any homophone for aunt.. The homonym only exists in Americanized accents.
A word with more than one meaning is a homophone, a/k/a homonym. Example: two and too.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
The homonym for "in that place" is "their". The homophone for "belonging to them" is "there".
The homonym homophone of "flat land" is "flatland." The homonym homophone of "joiner's tool" is "jointer's tool."
The answer is which, but you mean homophone, not homonym.
The answer is which, but you mean homophone, not homonym.
A homophone is a type of homonym.
Homonym of harbour: harbor (US spelling) Homophone of harbour: barber
Technically, there is no homonym for no, but the *homophone* is the word know.
Technically, there is no homonym, but the homophone is know.
A homonym is another term for a homophone. Homonyms are words that sound alike but have different meanings or spellings.
"Choose" is a homograph, as it has the same spelling but different meanings when pronounced differently. It is not a homophone or homonym.
The word "bow" is both a homophone and a homonym. As a homophone, it sounds the same as "bough" and "beau." As a homonym, it has different meanings such as a type of knot and the front part of a ship.