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  2. Common Examples of Homophones. Homophones are the most confusing words in the English language. Rode — Road; Sauce — Source; Scene — Seen; See — Sea; Side — Sighed; Soar — Sore; Sole — Soul; Some — Sum; Sort — Sought; Stare — Stair; Stationary — Stationery; Steal — Steel; Stile — Style; Sun — Son; Tail — Tale

  3. Examples of Homophones | YourDictionary

    www.yourdictionary.com/articles/examples-homophones

    Some common examples of homophones, including the words used in a sentence, are: brake/break: When teaching my daughter how to drive, I told her if she didn't hit the brake in time she would break the car's side mirror. cell/sell: If you sell drugs, you will get arrested and end up in a prison cell.

  4. The Ultimate Guide to Homophones | Grammarly Blog

    www.grammarly.com/.../homophones

    Homophones are words that are pronounced the same way but have different meanings. Sometimes they’re spelled identically and sometimes they aren’t. … Learn common examples of homophones, discover how they're used, and understand how homophones differ from homonyms and homographs.

  5. Examples Of Homophones

    homophonelist.com/examples-of-homophones

    Here are 150 examples of homophones that are the most common homophone pairs and groups in the English language. And by ‘most common’, we mean most common as per our own arbitrary decision making.

  6. 100 Examples Of Homophones With Sentences: Better ...

    naturalenglishcentral.com/100-examples-of...

    100 examples of homophones with sentences: 1-50. Here are the first of our 100 examples of homophones with sentences. Practice reading and repeating them with correct pronunciation. 50 homophones. 8: I have 8 apples in my basket.

  7. What is a Homophone? A homophone is a word with the same sound as another word but a different definition. Some homophones also have the exact same spellings. What are Common Homophones? The most popular homophones in the English language are “there,” “their,” and “theyre.”

  8. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different spellings and different meanings. For example, “pair” and “pear” sound identical but refer to different things. Learning homophones helps you understand context and avoid confusion in both spoken and written English. Why Are Homophones Important?