Homophone: Difference between revisions

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A [[homophone]] is a word that sounds exactly like another.  'Meat', referring to animal food, sounds exactly like 'meet', meaning 'come together'.  
A [[homophone]] is a word that sounds exactly like another.  'Meat', referring to animal food, sounds exactly like 'meet', meaning 'come together'.  


When homophones have the same spelling, they are also '''homonyms''': the [[modal verb]] 'will' sounds and also looks exactly like 'will' as in 'last will and testament', and there is a third 'will', as in 'having a strong will'.  (Words with the same spelling  are called '''homographs''', but they are not all homophones: some have different pronunciations, as with the verb 'to tear', meaning 'to rip', and 'tear', as in 'tearful'.)
When homophones have the same spelling, they are also '''homonyms''': the [[modal verb]] 'will' as in 'will they came?' sounds and also looks exactly like the [[noun]] 'will' as in 'having a strong will' or 'last will and testament'.   
 
Words with the same spelling  are called '''homographs''', but they are not all homophones: some have different pronunciations, as with the verb 'to tear', meaning 'to rip', and 'tear', as in 'tearful'. Thus homonyms are homophonic homographs.

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A homophone is a word that sounds exactly like another. 'Meat', referring to animal food, sounds exactly like 'meet', meaning 'come together'.

When homophones have the same spelling, they are also homonyms: the modal verb 'will' as in 'will they came?' sounds and also looks exactly like the noun 'will' as in 'having a strong will' or 'last will and testament'.

Words with the same spelling are called homographs, but they are not all homophones: some have different pronunciations, as with the verb 'to tear', meaning 'to rip', and 'tear', as in 'tearful'. Thus homonyms are homophonic homographs.