The homonym for bury is berry, meaning fruit.
The homophones for the given descriptions are: bury/berry.
The homophone for "bury" is "berry."
The homonym of "bury" is "berry." While "bury" means to place a dead body in the ground, "berry" refers to a small, pulpy, and typically edible fruit.
The homophone for the word "berry" is "bury." "Berry" refers to a small, pulpy fruit, while "bury" means to place something underground or cover it with something.
The abstract noun for bury is burial.
The noun forms of the verb to bury are burial and the gerund, burying.
Bury is a verb and not a noun. The correponding noun is burial, the plural form of which is burials.
The noun forms of the verb to bury are burial and the gerund, burying, both are concrete nouns as words for a physical action.The noun 'burial' is an abstract noun as a word for a ceremony surrounding a formal interment of a body.
Yes, it is a noun. It is related to the verb "to bury" and the adjective "buried."
Berry is a noun, not a verb. Bury is a verb
No, "burial" is a noun. The word "bury" is a verb.
The noun form of to bury is burial. Burying can also used as a noun, but is more specifically a gerund.
The word 'interment' is a noun form, a word for the burial of a body.
Barry is a name, and hence classified as a proper noun. It does sound something like the verb bury.
its bury me bury me
Berry is a noun. An action verb must show some kind of movement or activity: to run, to walk, to dance, to eat, to swim. Since a berry is a thing, it does not show action, and is a noun. But you may be thinking of "bury," which in some English dialects sounds like "berry." Bury is an action verb.