English Vocabulary in Use Upper-intermediate » Unit 82: Homophones and homographs

Word List
  • aloud
  • bathing (baby)
  • brake
  • fair
  • fare
  • faze
  • flu
  • grate
  • great
  • groan
  • heir
  • hoarse
  • hour
  • laze
  • lead (pipe)
  • lead singer
  • live
  • mail
  • male
  • meat
  • meet
  • our
  • pail
  • pain
  • pair
  • pale
  • pane
  • pare
  • peal
  • peel
  • per
  • phase
  • plaice
  • practice
  • pray
  • prey
  • purr
  • rain
  • rays
  • rein
  • right
  • rite
  • roe
  • row
  • sail
  • scene
  • sew
  • sight
  • site
  • so
  • sole
  • soul
  • sow
  • stake
  • steak
  • sum
  • tee
  • their
  • there
  • they’re
  • threw
  • through
  • tire
  • toe
  • tow
  • tyre
  • use
  • waist
  • wait
  • waste
  • weak
  • weather
  • week
  • weight
  • whether
  • whine
  • wind
  • wine
  • would
  • wound
  • air
Exercises

82.1 ‣ Each underlined word rhymes with, or sounds similar to, one of the words in brackets. Choose the matching word.

  1. The girl I live with knows a good pub with live music. (five / give)
  2. The main house _____ houses _____ a collection of rare stamps. (mouse / browse)
  3. It's no use _____. I can't use _____ this gadget. (snooze / juice)
  4. You sow _____ the seeds while I feed the sow _____. ( cow / go)
  5. The violinist in the bow _____ tie made a bow _____. (now / so)
  6. He's the lead _____ singer in the group 'Lead _____ piping'. (head / deed)
  7. What a row _____ from the last house in the row _____! (plough / though)
  8. Does he still suffer from his war wound _____? (found / tuned)
  9. I wound _____ the rope around the tree to strengthen it against the gale. (round / spooned)
  10. It's hard to wind _____ in the sails in this wind _____. (find / tinned)

82.2 ‣ Write the word given in phonemic script in the correct spelling for the context.

  1. I really must do some more exercise or I'll never lose /weɪt/.
  2. Watching TV game shows is such a /weɪst/ of time. _____
  3. There's a hole in the /səʊl/ of my shoe. _____
  4. He broke a /peɪn/ of glass in the kitchen window. _____
  5. The eldest son of the monarch is the /eə/ to the throne. _____
  6. You are not /əˈlaʊd/ to talk during the test. _____
  7. Look at that lovely yacht with the red /seɪl/. _____
  8. He's going /θru:/_____ a rather difficult /feɪz/_____ at the moment.
  9. Don't throw away that orange /pi:l/. I need it for a recipe. _____

82.3 ‣ Write one sentence using both of the words which correspond to the phonemic script.

  1. /peɪl/
  2. /ˈweðə/
    _____
  3. /'præktɪs/
    _____
  4. /greɪt/
    _____
  5. /waɪn/
    _____
  6. /breɪk/
    _____
  7. /saɪt/
    _____
  8. /preɪ/
    _____
  9. /hɔ:s/
    _____
  10. /reɪz/
    _____

82.4 ‣ Homophones and homographs are at the root of many jokes in English. Match the first part of each of these children’s jokes with the second part and then explain the play on words involved in each.

  1. What do you get if you cross a sheep and a kangaroo?
  2. What did the south wind say to the north wind? _____
  3. Why did the man take his pencil to bed? _____
  4. Why is history the sweetest lesson? _____
  5. What's the best birthday present? _____
  1. a) Let's play draughts.
  2. b) A drum takes a lot of beating.
  3. c) A woolly jumper.
  4. d) He wanted to draw the curtains.
  5. e) Because it’s full of dates.

82.5 ‣ Choose pairs of words from B opposite to describe the pictures below.

  1. _____
  2. _____
  3. _____

Answer Key
A ‣ Homophones and homographs

Homophones are words with different meanings which are pronounced in the same way but are spelt differently, e.g. row as in ‘at the end of the row’ and roe [fish eggs].

Homographs are words which are written in the same way but have different meanings and may be pronounced differently. Compare row in ‘we had a row /raʊ/ about who should pay for the tickets’ [argument] and ‘he sat at the end of the row’ /rəʊ/ [line of seats].

B ‣ Homophones

  1. air/heir
  2. mail/male
  3. raise/rays
  4. tea/tee
  5. aloud/allowed
  6. meat/meet
  7. read/reed
  8. there/their/they’re
  9. break/brake
  10. mown/moan
  11. rein/rain/reign
  12. through/threw
  13. fare/fair
  14. our/hour
  15. right/rite/write
  16. tire/tyre
  17. faze/phase
  18. pair/pear/pare
  19. sale/sail
  20. toe/tow
  21. flu/flew
  22. pale/pail
  23. scene/seen
  24. waist/waste
  25. grate/great
  26. pane/pain
  27. sight/site
  28. wait/weight
  29. groan/grown
  30. peal/peel
  31. so/sew
  32. weak/week
  33. hoarse/horse
  34. place/plaice
  35. sole/soul
  36. weather/whether
  37. its/it’s
  38. practise/practice
  39. some/sum
  40. whine/wine
  41. lays/laze
  42. pray/prey
  43. steak/stake
  44. would/wood

C ‣ Homographs with differing pronunciations

Check the pronunciation of the words in bold.

l live in the north of England. /lɪv/

My favourite rock group is singing live on TV tonight. /laɪv/

I read in bed each night. /ri:d/

I read War and Peace last year. /red/

The lead singer in the group is great. /li:d/

Lead pipes are dangerous. /led/ [metal, chemical element]

The wind blew the tree down. /wɪnd/

Wind the rope round this tree. /waɪnd/

She wound the string round the parcel and tied it up. /waʊnd/

He suffered a terrible wound in the war. /wu:nd/

This book is called English Vocabulary in Use. /ju:s/

You must know how to use words as well as their meaning. /ju:z/

They lived in a large old house. /haʊs/

The buildings house a library and two concert halls as well as a theatre. /haʊz/

The sow has five piglets. /saʊ/ [female pig]

The farmers sow the seeds in the spring. /səʊ/ [plant seeds]

Bathing the baby at night may help her to fall asleep. /ˈba:ðɪŋ/ (on a sign at a beach) No bathing. /ˈbeɪðɪŋ/

Common mistakes

I don’t know whether to go or not. (NOT I don’t know weather to go or not.)

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