live ... i live for this ...
live ... live on TV ...
Bow ... a long wooden stick used to play certain strng instrument ...
Bow... to bend forward at the waist ... e.g. "bow to the king"
Bow ..the front of the ship ...
Bow ...the weapon which shoots arrows ...
Bow ...a kind of ribbon ...
Bow ... to bend outward at the side ...e.g "bow legged"
Some examples of words with "igh" pronounced differently include "sleigh" (pronounced as "slay"), "bough" (pronounced as "bow"), and "burial" (pronounced as "bury-ul").
Some examples include: "their" and "there", "your" and "you're", "two", "to", and "too", "cite" and "site", "meet" and "meat".
Some examples of homographs are "bow" (a type of weapon and to bend forward), "tear" (to rip and a drop of water from the eye), and "wound" (an injury and the past tense of wind).
Some examples of dropped syllable words are:ChocolateEveryFavorite (Favourite in British English)DifferentFamilyVegetableCameraRestaurant
There is actually no way to say Courtney in Spanish... many names in English are spelled the same, and only pronounced differently in Spanish. Some names are pronounced and spelled differently in Spanish but Courtney just isn't one of them. One example of a name that is spelled and pronounced differently is Andrew, in Spanish it's spelled Andres with an accent over the e.
Different words are pronounced differently. Some multisyllabic words have more than one stress, some do not.
Some examples are:-HadSadMadTadCadLadBadRadCladPlaid (the word is pronounced 'plad')
A name means the same thing no matter what country it is used in. It is just pronounced differently in some of them.
Some examples of words that are spelled the same but pronounced differently (heteronyms) include: bow (to bend) and bow (a weapon), wind (a breeze) and wind (to twist), and lead (a metal) and lead (to guide).
Polish (from the nation of Poland) and polish- the act of making something shine.
Similar sounding words are words that are pronounced similarly but have different meanings or spellings. Examples include "there," "their," and "they're"; "to," "two," and "too"; and "your" and "you're." These words can be confusing because of their similar sounds but distinct uses.
Some examples of words that sound the same but are spelled and mean differently are "there", "their", and "they're"; "to", "two", and "too"; "break" and "brake"; "right" and "write"; "flower" and "flour".