The homophone for saw is sore.
What is the homophone of saw Saw- I saw a fish Sore- I have a sore hand
The homophone for "saw" is "sore."
saw and sore
"Knew," "nu,", and "gnu" are the homophones for "new."
The word soar is a homophone for sore. If a limb is sore it means it is aching, soar on the other hand is a verb that means flying high or increase rapidly. (Depending on the context in which the word is used)
What is the homophone of saw Saw- I saw a fish Sore- I have a sore hand
The homophone for "saw" is "sore."
saw and sore
A homophone for "sauces" is "saws us." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings or spellings. In this case, "saws us" refers to the past tense of "saw," which means to cut something with a saw.
"Knew," "nu,", and "gnu" are the homophones for "new."
So and sow. (And sew. For more homophones see www.originallanguage.blogspot.com)
a) Onomatopoeia b)A spoonerism c)Alliteration d)A homophone
The word soar is a homophone for sore. If a limb is sore it means it is aching, soar on the other hand is a verb that means flying high or increase rapidly. (Depending on the context in which the word is used)
I only have one answer and that is: "It's the PRESENCEof your birthday, now lets go and open your PRESENTS"
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Him is the homophone for hymn.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.