Guessing the words you are comparing are "plain" and "plains" the correct answer is C. Homophone; the two words are pronounced the same but have different meanings and sometimes different spellings. Because <em>plain</em> and <em>plains</em> are words that sound alike; but they have different meanings as in "<em>plain</em> cream cheese" the word plain means to be pure while the word <em>plains</em> in the part "crossing the plains in Kansas" is referring to the extensive area of Kansas country; lastly they have slightly different spellings as plain and plain<em>s</em>.
Option A. Homograph is wrong because the correct definition is two words are written the same, not pronounced the same.
Option B. Homophone is wrong because the correct definition is two words are pronounced the same, not written the same.
Option D. Homograph is wrong because in this case they are written the same as the <em>bear </em>(the verb to carry) and the <em>bear </em>(the animal). But for <em>plain</em> and <em>plains</em> they are not identical as one has a <em>S.</em>
Peter should develop his thesis statement during the prewriting stage. At this stage, an author thinks about what he is going to write about further down in the text, and a thesis statement is exactly that - a short summary of the main ideas that are going to be developed in a text.
<span>The </span>incorporation<span> of a </span>amusing<span> character, scene, or witty </span>discourse<span> in an </span>something else genuine<span> work, </span>regularly<span> to </span>soothe<span> tension</span>