The answer is not quite easy, but once you've failed you have missed and a synonym for fog that rhymes is mist.
The homophone for "fail to find or do something" is mist, as in a light fog, or fog.
The homophone for missed is mist.
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Missed and mist
Mist,
The homophone for missed is mist.
The homophone for missed is mist.
The homophones for "failed to find or do something" and "a fog" are mist and missed.
The homophone for "failed to do or find something" is mist.
A homophone for "failed to do something" and "a fog" is "mist." These words sound the same but have different meanings.
The homophone for missed is mist.
The homophone for missed is mist.
The homophone for missed is mist.
The homophones for "failed to find or do something" and "a fog" are mist and missed.
The homophone for "failed to do or find something" is mist.
A homophone for "failed to do something" and "a fog" is "mist." These words sound the same but have different meanings.
A fog may also be called a mist, and its homophone is missed
"Homophone fog" is not a commonly known term. Homophones are words that sound alike but have different meanings, while "fog" refers to a weather condition characterized by low-lying cloud cover. It's possible that "homophone fog" could refer to confusion or difficulty distinguishing between homophones in speech or writing.
The homophone pair for "missed mist" is "mist."
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I had the same problem with my 2002 PT a while back. It is caused by something faulty in the turn signal mechanism. After so many uses there is something that wears out, the easiest solution is to find the fuse that powers your fog lights and take it out. That's what I did after getting stuck with a drained battery because the fog lights stayed on all day while I was at work! Hope this helps
I'd say it was a fragment. 'The fog rolled in' seems to need something extra to form a sentence - for example... The fog rolled in quickly - The fog rolled in across the bay