The homophones for "not fine" could be "knot" and "nine." For "track," the homophones could be "tract" or "tract."
The homophone for "road" is "rode," and the homophone for "track" is "tract."
A homophone of "the not fine a road or track" is "definite." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. In this case, "definite" sounds like "the not fine a road or track" but is spelled differently and means something completely distinct.
The homonym of "tract" is "tracked."
The homonym for "tracked" is "tract."
"On the right track" is what people say when you are close to figuring something out.
If you think about this, you can figure it out. The phrase means that you are heading in the right direction figuratively - either you're close to understanding something or close to explaining it correctly. A tract is a piece of land, so saying "on the right tract" would make no sense if you're talking about going in the right direction. You'd say "on the right track" to indicate that someone is nearly there, but still not at the correct destination.
The corticospinal tract
The homophones for "not fine" could be "knot" and "nine." For "track," the homophones could be "tract" or "tract."
keeping tract
The homophone for "road" is "rode," and the homophone for "track" is "tract."
yes but the track is micrscopic
It's not urinary track but the urinary tract. The urinary tract is the path that your body fluids take to exit your body. Kidneys>Bladder>Penis or Vagina
intramuscular
The duration of Right on Track is 1.48 hours.
On the Right Track was created on 1981-03-06.
Right on Track was created on 2003-03-21.