The homophone for "in good health" and "a hole in the Earth" is "well" as in "well-being" and "water well."
The homophone for a manner of walking is "gate" and for an entrance is "gate" as well.
Yes, "they'll" is a homophone. It sounds the same as "their" and "there" even though they have different meanings and spellings.
Well... Why don't you find out yourself? I think your old enough to
The homophone of lesson is lessen. Lessen:To reduce,less/smaller,minimize,decrease,allay,assuage,alleviate etc. Well, it bascially means to make it smaller
The homophone for "in good health" and "a hole in the Earth" is "well" as in "well-being" and "water well."
The homophone for a manner of walking is "gate" and for an entrance is "gate" as well.
Yes, "they'll" is a homophone. It sounds the same as "their" and "there" even though they have different meanings and spellings.
Well... Why don't you find out yourself? I think your old enough to
The homophone of lesson is lessen. Lessen:To reduce,less/smaller,minimize,decrease,allay,assuage,alleviate etc. Well, it bascially means to make it smaller
The homophone for "heel" is "heal", and for "he'll" it is "heal" as well. Both pairs of words have the same pronunciation but different meanings.
In British dialects, the homophone is "court" (cawt).There is no homophone in US English : "court" is (cort).The 3-letter near-rhyme is "cot" (caht) which in some dialects sounds like court as well.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
The homophone for "hymn" is "him."
Well, crew(s) = cruise as its homophone Hope that helps :D
the homophone for stationery is stationary
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.