Homophones are words that have a different spelling, different meaning but the same pronunciation.
For example:
I went to the sea to see my friend.
The words sea and see have the same pronunciation but different meanings and spellings.
Homophone Examples
Buy/By
Buy her a present for her birthday.
She lives by a park.
Hole/Whole
There's a hole in my trousers.
I read the whole book in one day.
Write/Right
Write your name on top of the test paper.
I couldn't remember the right answer.
Note on Homonyms
Homonyms are words that have the same spelling and pronunciation but may have different meanings. For example, book and show are homonyms.
I am reading a good book at the moment.
We should
book our train tickets before the price goes up.
Show John where the bathroom is.
Did you enjoy the magic show?
Take a look at these sentences and choose the correct missing word. All of the missing words are homophones.
- 1) Would you like a ___ of cake?
- 2) I've never met a
___ actor before.
- 3) This is ___ difficult for me.
- 4) He's not coming because he's feeling ___.
- 5) It is so heavy because it is made of ___.
- 6) The boat will ___ across the
ocean.
- 7) The wall is too ___. Let's paint it.
- 8) Can you ___ me a cup of coffee?
- 9) Abdul ___ first-prize in the writing competition.
- 10) Can you ___ me or should I speak
up?
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A List of Easily Confused Words With Practice Exercises
A bare bear. GeoStock/Getty Images
Homonyms are two or more words that have the same sound or spelling but differ in meaning. Homophones—which means "same sounds" in Latin—are two or more words, such as knew and new or meat and meet, that are pronounced the same but differ in meaning, origin, and often spelling. Homographs, meanwhile, are words that have the same spelling but differ in origin, meaning, and sometimes pronunciation, such as the verb bear (to carry or endure) and the noun bear (the animal with a shaggy coat).
Words that fall under any of these three categories often confuse readers and writers alike. But they need not perplex you: Understanding the meaning of these three grammatical terms and, especially, being able to recognize them can help clear up any confusion. A list of some of the most common homonyms, homophones, and homographs can help any writer use these words correctly and any reader or listener recognize them when they occur.
Homonyms, Homophones, and Homographs
Here is a listing of some the most common homonyms, homophones, and homographs. The first column contains homonyms in alphabetical order, while the second and third columns list the corresponding homonym, homophone, or homograph as applicable.
accept - take in | except - other than | |
ad - advertisement | add - join, combine | |
advice - guidance | advise - recommend | |
aid - assist, assistance | aide - one who gives assistance | |
ail - to suffer poor health | ale - a beverage | |
air - atmosphere | ere - before | heir - one who inherits property |
aisle - a passage | I'll - contraction of I will | isle - island |
allusion - an indirect reference | illusion - false appearance | |
altar - table in a church | alter - to change | |
ate - past tense of eat | eight - the number 8 | |
bail - to clear water | bail - release of a prisoner | bale - a large bundle |
band - a ring, something that binds | band - a group | banned - prohibited |
bare - uncovered | bear - large animal | bear - support, yield |
bases - starting points | bases - four stations on a baseball field | basis - a basic principle |
beat - to strike, overcome | beat - exhausted | beet - a plant with red roots |
blew - past tense of blow | blue - the color | |
bread - baked food item | bred - produced | |
buy - purchase | by - near, through | bye - goodbye |
capital - punishable by death | capital - chief city | capitol - building where legislature meets |
ceiling - top of a room | sealing - setting, fastening | |
cell - compartment | sell - vend | |
cent - penny coin | scent - an odor | sent - past tense of send |
cereal - breakfast food | serial - sequential | |
chews - gnaws with teeth | choose - to select | |
Chile- country in South America | chili - bean stew | chilly - frosty |
chord - musical tone | cord - rope | |
cite - quote | site - location | sight - view |
close - opposite of open | clothes - clothing | |
coarse - rough | course - path, procedure | |
complement – enhance; go together | compliment - praise | |
conduct - behavior | conduct - to lead | |
council - committee | counsel - guidance | |
creak - squeak | creek - stream of water | |
crews - gangs | cruise - ride on a boat | |
days - plural of day | daze - stun | |
dear - darling | deer- woodland animal | |
desert - to abandon | desert - dry land | dessert - after-dinner treat |
dew - morning mist | do - operate | due - payable |
die - cease to exist | dye - color | |
discreet - tactful | discrete - distinct | |
doe - female deer | dough - uncooked bread | |
dual - double | duel - battle | |
elicit - draw out | illicit - illegal | |
eminent - distinguished | imminent - soon | |
ewe - female sheep | you - second-person personal pronoun | |
eye - sight organ | I -first-person personal pronoun | |
facts - true things | fax - a document transmitted via telephone | |
fair - equal | fare - price | |
fairy - elflike creature with wings | ferry - boat | |
faze - impact | phase - stage | |
feat - achievement | feet - plural of foot | |
find - to discover | fined - charged a penalty | |
fir - type of tree | fur - animal hair | |
flea - small biting insect | flee - run | |
flew - did fly | flu - illness | |
flour - powdery, ground up grain | flower - blooming plant | |
for - on behalf of | fore - front | four - three plus one |
forth - onward | fourth - number four | |
foreword - introduction to a book | forward - advancing | |
gene - a chromosome | jean - fabric; pants | |
gorilla - big ape | guerrilla - warrior | |
grease - fat | Greece - country in Europe | |
groan - moan | grown - form of grow | |
hair - head covering | hare - rabbit-like animal | |
hall - passageway | haul - tow | |
halve - cut in two parts | have - possess | |
hay - animal food | hey - interjection to get attention | |
heal - mend | heel - back of foot | |
hear - to listen | here - at this place | |
hi - hello | high - up far | |
hoarse - croaky | horse - riding animal | |
hole - opening | whole - entire | |
holey - full of holes | holy - divine | wholly - entirely |
hoarse - rough voice | horse - animal | |
hour - sixty minutes | our - belonging to us | |
knead - massage | need - desire | |
knew - did know | new - not old | |
knight - feudal horseman | night - evening | |
knot - tied rope | not - negative | |
know - have knowledge | no - opposite of yes | |
lead - metal | led - was the leader | |
leased - past tense of lease | least - the minimum | |
lessen - make smaller | lesson - class | |
loan - lend | lone - solitary | |
made - did make | maid - servant | |
mail - postage | male - opposite of female | |
material - matter | materiel - supplies for an organization, particularly the military | |
marry - to wed | merry - very happy | |
meat - animal protein | meet - encounter | |
mince - to chop finely | mints - type of sweet | |
morning - a.m. | mourning - remember the dead | |
none - not any | nun - woman who takes special vows | |
oar - boat paddle | or - otherwise | ore - mineral |
oh - expression of surprise or awe | owe - be obligated | |
one - single | won - did win | |
overdo - do too much | overdue - past due date | |
pail - bucket | pale - not bright | |
pain - hurt | pane - window glass | |
peace - calm | piece - segment | |
peak – highest point | peek - glance | |
patience - being willing to wait | patients - person treated in a hospital or by a doctor | |
pear - a type of fruit | pair - two (usually matching) | |
plain - ordinary | plane - flight machine plane; flat surface | |
pole - post | poll - survey | |
poor - not rich | pour - make flow | |
pray - implore God | prey - quarry | |
principal - most important | principle - belief | |
rain – water from sky | rein - bridle | |
rap - tap | wrap - drape around | |
read - past tense of the verb to read | red - color | |
real - factual | reel - roll | |
right - correct; not left | write - scribble | |
ring - encircle | wring - squeeze | |
road - street | rode - past tense of ride | |
role - function | roll - rotate | |
rose - flower | rows - lines | |
sail - move by wind power | sale - bargain price | |
scene - landscape | seen - viewed | |
sea - ocean segment | see - observe with eyes | |
seam - joining edge | seem - appear | |
sew - connect with thread | so - as a result | sow - plant |
soar - ascend | sore - hurt place | |
sole - single | soul - essence | |
son - male child | sun - the star that lights the solar system | |
some - a few | sum - amount | |
stair - step | stare - to look at steadily | |
steal - swipe | steel - alloy | |
suite - large room in a hotel | sweet - the opposite of sour | |
tail - animal’s appendage | tale - story | |
their - belonging to them | there - at that place | they’re - they are |
threw - past tense of throw | through - passing from one place to another | |
to - toward | too - also | two - the number 2 |
toe - foot appendage | tow - pull along | |
vary - differ | very - wail - howl | |
wail - howl | whale - huge sea mammal | |
waist - area below ribs | waste - squander | |
wait – kill time | weight - measurable load | |
war - battle | wore - did wear | |
warn - caution | worn - used | |
way - path | weigh - measure mass | |
we - us | wee - tiny | |
weak - not strong | week - seven days | |
wear - to don attire | where - question word | |
weather - climate | whether - if | |
which - that | witch - sorcerer | |
wood - material coming from trees | would - conditional auxiliary | |
your - belonging to you | you’re - you are |
Practice Using Homonyms, Homophones, and Homographs
Complete each of the following sentences by filling in the blank with the correct word. You'll find the answers at the end of the exercise. To heighten interest, all of the sentences are quotes from various authors' writings in books and magazine articles published over the years. Feel free to use the previous table to help you if you get stumped.
- “He simply sat down on the ledge and forgot everything _____ [accept or except] the marvelous mystery.”
— Lawrence Sargent Hall - "I live in the Oakland Hills in a tiny house on a street so windy you can’t drive more than ten miles per hour. I rented it because the _____ [ad or add] said this: 'Small house in the trees with a garden and a fireplace. Dogs welcome, of
course.'"
— Pam Houston - "Francis wondered what _____ [advice or advise] a psychiatrist would have for him."
— John Cheever - "The _____ [aid or aide] gets out of the way, picking her skirt out of the rubble of children at her feet."
— Rosellen Brown - "He seemed to want to recapture the cosseted feeling he'd had when he'd been sick as a child and she would serve him flat ginger _____ [ail
or ale], and toast soaked in cream, and play endless card games with him, using his blanket-covered legs as a table."
— Alice Elliott Dark - "He sat down and leaned forward, pulling the chair's rear legs into the _____ [air, ere, or heir] so that the waitress could get by."
— Stanley Elkins - "[T]he stewardess was moving down the _____ [aisle, I'll, or isle], like a trained nurse taking temperatures
in a hospital ward, to see that they were all properly strapped in for the take-off."
— Martha Gellhorn - "Mrs. Parmenter laughed at his _____ [allusion or illusion] to their summer at Mrs. Sterrett's, in Rome, and gave him her coat to hold."
— Willa Cather - "In the long years between, she had fashioned many fine dresses—gowned gay girls for their conquests and robed fair brides for the _____ [altar or alter]."
— Mary Lerner - "On a Saturday morning soon after he came to live with her, he turned over her garbage while she was at the grocery store and _____ [ate or eight] rancid bacon drippings out of a small Crisco can."
— Pam Durban - "The barn was bigger than a church, and the fall's fresh hay _____ [bails or bales] were stacked to the roof in the side mows."
— John Updike - "Her two spare dresses were gone, her comb
was gone, her checkered coat was gone, and so was the mauve hair-_____ [band or banned] with a mauve bow that had been her hat."
— Vladimir Nabokov - "Without the shelter of those trees, there is a great exposure—back yards, clotheslines, woodpiles, patchy sheds and barns and privies—all _____ [bare or bear], exposed, provisional looking."
— Alice Munro - "This was the time when outfields were larger than they are today and
well-hit balls would roll for a long time, giving runners ample time to round the _____ [bases or basis] for a home run."
— Deidre Silva and Jackie Koney - "The conductor had his knotted signal cord to pull, and the motorman _____ [beat or beet] the foot gong with his mad heel."
— Saul Bellow - "Nancy held the cup to her mouth and _____ [blew or blue] into the cup."
— William Faulkner - "A pigeon landed nearby. It hopped on its little red feet and pecked into something that might have been a dirty piece of stale _____ [bread or bred] or dried mud."
— Isaac Bashevis Singer - "He was wearing a new hat of a pretty biscuit shade, for it never occurred to him to _____ [buy, by, or bye] anything of a practical color; he had put it on for the first time and the rain was spoiling it."
— Katherine Anne Porter
Answers to the Exercise
1. except 2. ad 3. advice 4. aide 5. ale 6. air 7. aisle 8. allusion 9. altar 10. ate 11. bales 12. band 13. bare 14. bases 15. beat 16. blew 17. bread 18. buy
Sources
- Hall, Lawrence Sargent. "The Ledge." The Hudson Review, 1960.
- Houston, Pam. "Waltzing the Cat." Washington Square Press, 1999, New York.
- Cheever, John. "The Country Husband." The New Yorker, 1955.
- Brown, Rosellen. "How to Win." The Massachusetts Review, 1975.
- Dark, Alice Elliott. "In the Gloaming." The New Yorker. 1994.
- Elkins, Stanley. "Criers and Kibitzers, Kibitzers and Criers." Perspective, 1962.
- Gellhorn, Martha. "Miami-New York." The Atlantic Monthly, 1948.
- Cather, Willa. "Double Birthday." "Uncle Valentine and Other Stories." University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Neb., 1986.
- Lerner, Mary. "Little Selves." The Atlantic Monthly, 1915.
- Durban, Pam. "Soon." The Southern Review, 1997.
- Updike, John. "My Father's Tears and Other Stories." Knopf, 2009, New York.
- Nabokov, Vladimir "That in Aleppo Once..." The Atlantic Monthly, 1944.
- Munro, Alice. "Meneseteung." The New Yorker, 1989.
- Silva, Deidre, and Koney, Jackie. "It Takes More Than Balls: The Savvy Girls' Guide to Understanding and Enjoying Baseball." Skyhorse, 2008, New York.
- Bellow, Saul. "A Silver Dish." The New Yorker, 1979.
- Faulkner, William. "That Evening Sun Go Down." The American Mercury, 1931.
- Singer, Isaac Bashevis. "The Key." "A Friend of Kafka." Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, New York.
- Katherine Anne Porter, "Theft." The Gyroscope, 1930.