ęē“¢ č±čŖ čåø«
Ms. Katja Driesel
č¼å°ęåø«Ever get tripped up by English? Check out this sentence:
"I wanted to go to the park, too, but two hours ago, it started raining." š¤Æ
To, too, and two are homophones: words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. Classic examples are your/you're and there/their/they're.
Here's a fun "aha" moment: Homophones have cousins called homographsāwords that are spelled the same but have different meanings! Think of the verb to lead (leed) a team vs. a pencil made of lead (led).
So, words can be twins by sound (homophones) or by spelling (homographs)!
Context is everything. What homophones always get you? Drop them in the comments! š
2025幓9ę11ę„ 14:36
Ms. Katja Driesel
čŖčØč½å
č±čŖ, å¾·čŖ
åøēæčŖčØ
č±čŖ
ä½ ä¹čرęåę”ēęē«

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
44 č® Ā· 9 ēčØ

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
31 č® Ā· 6 ēčØ

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
59 č® Ā· 23 ēčØ
ę“å¤ęē«