Homophones2d: Difference between revisions

From Lexical Resource Semantics
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:


'''Perfect!'''<br/> <br/> The pst tense of ''to eat'' is '''ate''' and the one-digit number lies between seven and nine. As you can hear by clicking on this [http://www.leo.org/dict/audio_en/to_look_like_the_cat_who_ate_the_canary.mp3 example ''(look like the cat who ate the canary)''], the oast tense form sounds exactly as [http://www.leo.org/dict/audio_en/eight.mp3 eight]. Therefore, these two words are homophones but no homographs because their writing is not the same.
'''Perfect!'''<br/> <br/> The past tense of ''to eat'' is '''ate''' and the one-digit number lies between seven and nine. As you can hear by clicking on this [http://www.leo.org/dict/audio_en/to_look_like_the_cat_who_ate_the_canary.mp3 example ''(look like the cat who ate the canary)''], the past tense form sounds exactly as [http://www.leo.org/dict/audio_en/eight.mp3 eight]. Therefore, these two words are homophones but no homographs because their writing is not the same. Try again!
<br/>
[http://www.lexical-resource-semantics.de/wiki/index.php/NMTS-Group2#Part_1_-_Homophones '''<span style="color:#2E8B57">Back to Part 1</span>''']

Latest revision as of 21:57, 14 February 2013

Perfect!

The past tense of to eat is ate and the one-digit number lies between seven and nine. As you can hear by clicking on this example (look like the cat who ate the canary), the past tense form sounds exactly as eight. Therefore, these two words are homophones but no homographs because their writing is not the same. Try again!
Back to Part 1