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Confusing Homophones

[B1] Confusing Homophones in English helps learners master pronunciation and spelling by distinguishing common word pairs. This module covers homophones and other confusing words in English.

Homophones

Homophones are words that sound the same in speech but have different spellings and meanings. In English, homophones are common because many different spellings can represent the same sounds. This module focuses on how to tell homophones apart by using meaning, grammar, and typical sentence patterns rather than pronunciation alone.

Which definition matches homophones?

Spelling vs sound

English spelling does not always match pronunciation, so two different spellings can produce the same spoken form. When you hear a homophone, you must choose the correct spelling based on what the sentence is about and what kind of word is needed. Listening gives you the sound, but the surrounding words tell you the role and meaning.

Rule
Description
Notation
Example
๐Ÿ”คMany spellings share one sound
๐Ÿ”คDifferent letter patterns can produce the same pronunciation, creating homophones.
๐Ÿ”คsame pronunciation, different spelling
๐Ÿ”คmeet and meat
๐Ÿ”คWeak vowels increase similarity
๐Ÿ”คUnstressed vowels often reduce to a neutral sound, making different words sound alike.
๐Ÿ”คschwa in unstressed syllables
๐Ÿ”คaffect and effect in fast speech
๐Ÿ”คFinal consonants can merge
๐Ÿ”คSome final sounds are subtle, so words can be confused when spoken quickly.
๐Ÿ”คreduced final release
๐Ÿ”คpassed and past

Which statement matches the rule โ€œmany spellings share one soundโ€?

Meaning clues

The safest way to choose among homophones is to check meaning: what is the sentence trying to say. Ask a simple question like who, what, where, or why, then pick the word that matches that idea. If you can replace the word with a synonym, that synonym can confirm which homophone you need.

Word/Phrase
Definition
Example
๐Ÿง right
๐Ÿง correct or a direction
๐Ÿง The answer is right.
๐Ÿง write
๐Ÿง to put words on paper or a screen
๐Ÿง Please write your name.
๐Ÿง one
๐Ÿง the number 1
๐Ÿง I have one ticket.
๐Ÿง won
๐Ÿง past tense of win
๐Ÿง She won the match.
She(to win, past tense) the competition.

Grammar clues

Homophones often belong to different parts of speech, so grammar helps you choose. Check whether the slot needs a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb, and then pick the homophone that fits that grammatical role. Function words like articles, prepositions, and auxiliaries strongly predict what type of word comes next.

Rule
Example
๐Ÿ“ŒAfter an article, a noun is likely
๐Ÿ“Œa piece of advice
๐Ÿ“ŒAfter to plus base verb, choose a verb form
๐Ÿ“Œto write a letter
๐Ÿ“ŒBefore a noun, an adjective is likely
๐Ÿ“Œtheir car
๐Ÿ“ŒAfter a subject, a verb is likely
๐Ÿ“Œtheyโ€™re leaving

Choose the correct word by part of speech: "After the article 'a' we need a ___ (noun)."

There family

There, their, and theyโ€™re sound alike for many speakers, but they do different jobs in a sentence. There is used for location or as an introductory word before a verb. Their shows possession, and theyโ€™re is the contraction of they are, so it must be followed by something that fits after are.

Word/Phrase
Definition
Example
๐Ÿ“there
๐Ÿ“location or introductory word
๐Ÿ“The keys are over there.
๐Ÿ“their
๐Ÿ“belonging to them
๐Ÿ“Their house is big.
๐Ÿ“theyโ€™re
๐Ÿ“they are
๐Ÿ“Theyโ€™re ready now.
Fill in the blank with the correct form: "(location) are three books on the table."

Your family

Your and youโ€™re are frequently confused because they share the same pronunciation in most accents. Your is a possessive determiner used before a noun, while youโ€™re is the contraction of you are and is followed by an adjective, noun phrase, or verb form that can follow are. A quick test is to expand youโ€™re to you are and see if the sentence still makes sense.

Rule
Example
๐ŸงฉUse your before a noun
๐ŸงฉYour phone is ringing.
๐ŸงฉUse youโ€™re for you are
๐ŸงฉYouโ€™re late again.
๐ŸงฉExpansion test: replace youโ€™re with you are
๐ŸงฉYou are welcome.
Fill in the blank: "Is that(possessive determiner) phone ringing?"

Its vs itโ€™s

Its and itโ€™s are confusing because the apostrophe does not mark possession here. Its is possessive and means belonging to it, while itโ€™s is a contraction of it is or it has. If you can expand itโ€™s to it is or it has, then the apostrophe form is correct.

Rule
Example
๐Ÿ”ŽUse its for possession
๐Ÿ”ŽThe dog wagged its tail.
๐Ÿ”ŽUse itโ€™s for it is
๐Ÿ”ŽItโ€™s cold today.
๐Ÿ”ŽUse itโ€™s for it has
๐Ÿ”ŽItโ€™s been a long day.

Choose the correct expansion: "It's (__) late." Expand if needed.

Then vs than

Then relates to time, sequence, or result, while than is used for comparisons. In speech they may sound similar, especially in fast conversation, but their meanings are different. Look for comparison words like more, less, -er adjectives, or phrases like rather, because those usually require than.

Word/Phrase
Definition
Example
โณthen
โณtime or next step
โณFinish, then call me.
โš–๏ธthan
โš–๏ธcomparison
โš–๏ธShe is taller than me.

Choose the correct word: "Finish your homework, ___ (next) go to bed."

To vs too vs two

To, too, and two are pronounced the same in many contexts, but each has a distinct function. To is most often a preposition or the marker before a base verb. Too means also or excessively, and two is the number 2, so it typically appears near countable nouns or number-related phrases.

Word/Phrase
Definition
Example
โžก๏ธto
โžก๏ธpreposition or verb marker
โžก๏ธI want to go.
โž•too
โž•also or excessively
โž•I want to go too.
2๏ธโƒฃ two
2๏ธโƒฃ the number 2
2๏ธโƒฃ Two tickets, please.
Fill in the blank: "I want(to + base verb) go to the store."

Hear vs here

Hear is a verb connected to listening and sound, while here is an adverb connected to location. They are fully homophonous for most speakers, so spelling must come from meaning. If the sentence is about sound, choose hear; if it is about place, choose here.

Word/Phrase
Definition
Example
๐Ÿ‘‚hear
๐Ÿ‘‚perceive sound
๐Ÿ‘‚Can you hear music?
๐Ÿ“here
๐Ÿ“in this place
๐Ÿ“Put it here.

Choose the correct word: "Can you ___ (perceive sound) that music?"

Proofreading strategy

To avoid homophone errors in writing, use a deliberate check: pause at the word, confirm its part of speech, and run a quick meaning test. Expanding contractions like theyโ€™re, youโ€™re, and itโ€™s often reveals mistakes immediately. Reading the sentence slowly and focusing on meaning rather than sound helps you notice when a homophone does not fit the grammar or the message.

Rule
Example
๐Ÿ“Check part of speech before choosing spelling
๐Ÿ“Their is followed by a noun: their plan
๐Ÿ“Expand contractions to confirm meaning
๐Ÿ“Itโ€™s raining โ†’ It is raining
๐Ÿ“Look for comparison signals for than
๐Ÿ“better than, more than
๐Ÿ“Look for time signals for then
๐Ÿ“then, next, after that

Which step is recommended when checking homophones in writing?

ร‰dito A2
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