Bare?
Wiki User
∙ 15y agoNo, "bear" and "bare" are not homophones. "Bear" refers to the animal, while "bare" means uncovered or naked.
The homophone for "bare" is "bear."
Another homophone for "bare" is "bear."
A homophone for "bear headed" is "bare headed," where "bear" refers to carrying a weight and "bare" means uncovered or naked.
Naked itself does not have a homophone. However, its synonym, "bare", does. Bare - without cover Bear - furry mammal Bear - deal with
There are two possibilities: Rise is a homophone of "ryes." Bear (to withstand) is a homophone of "bare."
The homophone for "bare" is "bear."
Another homophone for "bare" is "bear."
A homophone for "bear headed" is "bare headed," where "bear" refers to carrying a weight and "bare" means uncovered or naked.
"Bare" and the brand name "Bayer" are homonyms of "bear." bear = animal bare = uncovered, as in bare feet
Naked itself does not have a homophone. However, its synonym, "bare", does. Bare - without cover Bear - furry mammal Bear - deal with
There are two possibilities: Rise is a homophone of "ryes." Bear (to withstand) is a homophone of "bare."
bare, bear
Yes beer is a homonym with beer, bear, and bare
"bare" and "bear" "to" and "too" "pair" and "pear"
A word that is spelled differently but pronounced the same is called a homophone. Examples include "right" and "write," or "bare" and "bear."
- A bare bear can bear very little because it's bare.
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