An example of a homophone is "pair" and "pear." These words sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
Synonyms are words that have a similar meaning, such as "happy" and "joyful." Antonyms are words that have opposite meanings, such as "hot" and "cold."
The Latin root word "don" means "give." It is commonly found in English words like "donate" (to give) and "condone" (to give approval or pardon).
The future tense of "give" is "give", example; "I will give you the answer". The present tense is "giving", example; "I am giving you the answer". The past tense is "gave", example; "I gave you the answer". You can also use "given" for past tense, example "I had given everything".
The words "pair" and "pear" are an example of homonyms, as they sound the same but have different meanings.
no
phone-clipped form of telephone
clippings words
advertisement-ad, bicycle-bike
wadddadwa
Like a song telling you the words to sing...
Welcome to my dental operatory.
para kang papa moo
A compound word is a word made up of two different words put together such as newspaper or bedtime.
Sorry, but we can't do your homework for you here.
Prefixes are the words that are added before words to give a new meaning to that word. For example,qualified - disqualified. here "dis" is a prefix
An example of a homophone is "pair" and "pear." These words sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.