Homonyms, Homophones and Homographs
Homonyms, homophones and homographs can bring confusion to even adults and teachers! VocabularySpellingCity can help anyone master these word groups. For clarity, we've brought them all together on one page. It makes it easier to learn the difference among the three types of words using the definitions and homonyms, homophones and homographs examples below.|
Homonyms
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Homophones
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Homographs
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Multiple meaning
words
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Words that sound
alike
|
Same spelling,
different pronunciation, different meanings |
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the spruce tree...
to spruce up... |
addition for math
edition of a book |
desert = abandon
desert = area of land |
|
suit yourself...
wore a suit... |
I want to go
I like it too One plus one is two |
bass = fish
bass = instrument |
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weigh on the scale...
scale the wall... |
capitol building
state capital |
close = nearby
close = to shut |
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the price is fair...
go to the fair... |
pick a flower
bake with flour |
bow = to bend down
bow = ribbon |
Homonyms
Homonyms, or multiple meaning words, are words that share the same spelling and the same pronunciation but have different meanings. For example, bear.- A bear (the animal) can bear (tolerate) very cold temperatures.
- The driver turned left (opposite of right) and left (departed from) the main road.
Homographs
Homographs are words that are spelled the same, but have different meanings and are often pronounced differently as well. Some examples of homographs are:- bass as in fish vs bass as in music
- bow as in arrow vs bow as in bending or taking a bow at the end of a performance
- close as in next to vs close as in shut the door
- desert as in dry climate vs desert as in leaving alone.
https://www.spellingcity.com/homophones-and-homonyms.html

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