Fare is like money related and fair is like a festive event
No, fair is an adjective, meaning okay or passable. Fare is a noun, meaning a payment.
Book value of asset is the value of asset shown in books of accounts while fair value of asset is the current price at which that product is selling or sellable in market.
difference between as on and as at
Directly. Their difference IS the difference between them.
The difference between 9538 and 6743 is 2795.
The homophone of fare is "fair."
the word 'FARE' means cost of jouney ticket [bus, train, flight travel etc] Bus fare, train fare, flight fare etc also means manage, perform, get along etc [how did you fare in the exam? Can you fare better in future? etc means to eat. We fared sumptuously Whereas the word FAIR means good [a fair comparison] reasonable [fair compensation] unblemished [fair name] colour of skin [she is fair complexioned] and exhibition [there is a Book Fair, Trade Fair, Job Fair, Food Fair etc]
A homophone for "fare" is "fair".
Fair Fare is what you pay on a bus or train. Fair can be light coloured hair or something that is honest and agreeable, it's opposite is unfair or not fair.
(Fair and fare are homophones, sound-alike words, which can contributes to misspelling.)(adjective-noun)"He did not think it was fair that he pay a bus fare for his dog."(noun-noun)"The railroad offered a reduced fare for travel to the county fair."
A hononym for FAIR is FARE..
Fare
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The Fair Fare - 1916 was released on: USA: 28 August 1916
The homophone for fair is fare as in money paid to ride a bus, plane, train etc.
As a verb: I hope you fare well at your first dance class.As a noun:I paid a round trip fare for the trip.My last fare for the day chatted with me until the end of the route.The buffet served only vegetarian fare but it was all delicious.More fun with fare:Since your fare seems so much less than fair, I will see how I fare elsewhere!Fare thee well, fair maiden!The fare to enter the fair seemed to me to be unfair.