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Coleman 2011. Homonyms Week 7. What is a homonym?. Words that are spelled the same but pronounced differently OR Words that are pronounced the same but spelled differently. BY the way, I would like to BUY you coffee before we say goodBYE . Use BY as a preposition meaning “near”.
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Coleman 2011 Homonyms Week 7
What is a homonym? • Words that are spelled the same but pronounced differently OR • Words that are pronounced the same but spelled differently
BY the way, I would like to BUY you coffee before we say goodBYE. • Use BY as a preposition meaning “near”. * I live by my best friend. • Use BYE when you are abbreviating Goodbye, or meaning a week off in a sports tournament. * The Bears had a bye last week. * I said goodbye to my visitors. • Use BUY meaning to purchase. I need to buy new pencils.
IT’S a fact that learning never loses ITS excitement! • Use IT’S as a contraction for “It is” • It’s unusual for there not to be snow this time of year. • I don’t know what the weather is like. Memory Trick: If you can substitute the words “It is” for IT’S, you use the spelling WITH the apostrophe.
IT’S a fact that learning never loses ITS excitement! • Use ITS as the possessive form of IT. • ***It is unusual to have a possessive form of a pronoun that does not have an apostrophe, but in this case it does not have an apostrophe because the contraction uses it instead. • The school had its annual play in the spring. (“It” is a pronoun that replaces “school”. ITS shows that the play belongs to the school.)
My tooth is LOOSE; I think I will LOSE it soon! I will get $1 for my LOSS!! These are not homonyms because they are not pronounced or spelled the same, but they are commonly confused words. • LOOSE is an adjective meaning “not bound” • I have LOOSE change in my pocket. • My tooth is LOOSE! Memory Trick: LOOSE has two O’s, just like GOOSE.
My tooth is LOOSE; I think I will LOSE it soon! I will get $1 for my LOSS!! • LOSE is a verb meaning to misplace something. • I hope I don’t lose my wallet. • It is disappointing when the Bears lose.
My tooth is LOOSE; I think I will LOSE it soon! I will get $1 for my LOSS!! • LOSS is a noun, meaning a thing that has been lost or something that cannot be found. • The loss of her father was a difficult time for her. • The team would try again the day after their loss.
MADE/MAID • MADE is the past tense of the verb “make”. • MAID can mean a female servant, or a young, unmarried woman. • I made lasagna for dinner last night. • I asked my teenage sister to be my maid of honor. Memory Tip: A MAID can AID you with your housework. Replace the K in “make” with a D to get MADE.