English is absolutely full of words that sound or look the same but have different meanings. And we have words for these kinds of words: homophones, homographs, and homonyms. But remembering the difference can be its own challenge.
In this article, we鈥檒l break down the differences and the overlap and provide examples of all three.
鈿 Quick summary
Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, like 迟丑别谤别/迟丑别颈谤/迟丑别测鈥檙别 and 颈迟蝉/颈迟鈥檚. Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings. Homographs can be pronounced differently (like bass the fish and bass the instrument) or the same (like fair meaning 鈥渆quitable鈥 or 鈥渁 carnival鈥). The word homonyms is often used to refer to all such words in general. Some words, like bark, fall into more than one category鈥bark on a tree and 产补谤办听of a dog are both homophones (sounding the same) and homographs (being spelled the same), for example.
黑料网 is the difference between homophones, homonyms, and homographs?
There is a helpful way to tell the difference between the words homophone, homograph, and homonym: knowing what their endings mean can help you remember how they鈥檙e used.
Homophone, homonym, and homograph all start with homo-, which means 鈥渟ame.鈥
The -phone in homophone means 鈥渟ound.鈥 So homophones are words that sound the same. Homophones always have different meanings, but they may be spelled the same or differently. Bear (the animal) and bare (meaning 鈥渦ncovered鈥 or 鈥渆mpty鈥) are homophones. But so are bark (the sound a dog makes) and bark (the covering of a tree). And the different senses of bear (the animal and the verb meaning 鈥渢o carry鈥).
The -graph in homograph means 鈥渨ritten.鈥 Homographs are words that are written the same鈥攎eaning they always have the same spelling鈥攂ut have different meanings.
Homographs can be pronounced the same or not. For example, bass (the fish, rhymes with class) and bass (the instrument, rhymes with ace) are homographs. But so are the different senses of bark and bear.
Take a closer look at the homonym pair bare vs. bear.
Homonym examples
As we鈥檝e just explained, the term homonym can refer to both a homophone and a homograph, so we鈥檝e broken them down into two separate lists. The items from both lists can be broadly referred to as homonyms. But for clarity, it鈥檚 best to use the term homophones when referring to words that sound the same and homographs when referring to words that are spelled the same. Still, there are examples that fit into both categories, such as the different senses of bark and bear discussed earlier.
Homophone听别虫补尘辫濒别蝉
Here are just some of the many examples of homophones in English:
- there | their | they鈥檙e
- to | too | two
- its | it鈥檚
- your | you鈥檙e
- whose | who鈥檚
- by | buy | bye
- I | eye
- see | sea
- dear | deer
- bare | bear
- hair | hare
- here | hear
- air | heir
- where | wear
- pair | pear | pare
- fair | fare
- right | write | 谤颈迟别听
- sight | site | cite
- steal | steel
- plain | plane
- sale | sail
- break | brake
- know | no
- week | weak
- add | ad
- meet | meat
- sell | cell
- great | grate
- piece | peace
- eight | ate
- one | won
- flower | flour
- for | four | fore
- our | hour
- wait | weight
- night | knight
- male | mail
- son | sun
- board | bored
- hole | whole
- sweet | suite
- tail | tale
Homograph听别虫补尘辫濒别蝉
It鈥檚 impossible to count how many words are homographs because so many words have more than one meaning.
We鈥檒l separate this list into homographs that are pronounced differently and those that are pronounced the same. There are far fewer examples of ones that are pronounced differently.
Homographs that are pronounced differently聽
Here are several examples of homographs whose pronunciation is different.
- minute (the noun meaning 鈥60 seconds鈥; the adjective meaning 鈥渧ery small鈥)
- bass (the fish; the instrument)
- Polish (from Poland) and polish (to make something shiny)
- bow (the noun referring to a ribbon tied in a decorative way; the verb meaning to bend reverently)
- close (the adjective meaning 鈥渘earby鈥; the verb meaning 鈥渢o shut鈥)
- lead (the metal; the verb meaning 鈥渢o act as a leader鈥)
Homographs that are pronounced the same
Here are some of the many, many homographs that sound the same, along with some of their common meanings (in many cases, there are multiple other meanings).
- bear (the animal; the verb meaning 鈥渢o carry鈥)
- ring (a circle; a type of jewelry; what a phone does)
- fan (the appliance that makes wind; an admirer/appreciator)
- band (music group; a ring or strap)
- bat (the animal; a baseball bat)
- kind (the adjective meaning 鈥渘ice鈥; the noun meaning 鈥渢ype鈥)
- part (a component of something; a line in one鈥檚 hair; the verb meaning 鈥渢o separate鈥)
- park (a noun meaning an outdoor space; a verb meaning what you do to a car)
- class (lesson; category; classiness)
- fair (equitable or according to the rules; a carnival)