Homophones are words that have exactly the same sound (pronunciation) but different meanings and (usually) spelling.
For example, the following two words have the same sound, but different meanings and spelling:
hour
our
Usually, homophones are in groups of two (our, hour), but occasionally they can be in groups of three (to, too, two) or even more. If we take our bear example, we can add another word to the group:
bear (noun: large, heavy animal with thick fur)
bear (verb: tolerate, endure)
bare (adjective: naked, without clothes)
Answer:
A
Explanation:
There should always be a comma before and after a name. I am so sorry if it is wrong.
Well, you don't exactly comment per se. You click "answer" or go to someone else's answer and click reply (not sure the exact labelling but it's something along those lines).
Edit: It says "add your comment to this answer here", not "reply."
Answer:
She is killed.
Explanation:
The given excerpt is from the second chapter of the book <em>The Call of the Wild </em>by Jack London.
In this chapter, Buck understands that he is now in the wild, where both the dogs and men around him are cruel and violent. His traveling companion, a female named Curly, is the one described here. She approaches a husky in a friendly way, but he attacks her immediately, which leads to her death. He knocked her off her feet, and she never got back up.