English, asked by Indrani43, 4 days ago

I eat my dinner at eight o'clock and she eats her dinner at nine o'clock. which is the finite verb​

Answers

Answered by sonukumarsharma55
0

Answer:

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GRAMMAR

GRAMMAR - THE RULES OF ENGLISH

THE NINE PARTS OF SPEECH

CONJUNCTION

NOUN

PRONOUN

ADJECTIVE

VERB

ADVERB 1

ADVERB 2

ADVERB 3

PREPOSITION

INTERJECTION

ARTICLE

PROPER NOUNS AND COMMON NOUNS

SYNTAX

PASSIVE AND ACTIVE VOICE

TRADITIONAL PASSIVE AND ACTIVE

ACTIVE VOICE IS PREFERRED

THEIR AND THERE

SENTENCE

HOMOPHONES, HOMOGRAPHS AND HOMONYMS

HOMOPHONES

HOMOGRAPHS

HOMONYMS

PUNCTUATION

TENSES

WORDS YOU MUST KNOW

PERSPECTIVE

LANGUAGE AND PRESENTATIONAL FEATURES

FONTS

FEEDBACK

HOMOPHONES – WORDS THAT SOUND THE SAME (SEE, SEA) BUT ARE WRITTEN DIFFERENTLY

Now that we know that

homo = THE SAME

all we have to remember is that:

phone = SOUND

Joined up, this gives:

Homophone memory text

Homo phones are words that sound the same

The other people around the large phone were increasingly frustrated by how loud it was (sound).

Relate phone to sound.

Here are some homophone examples in sentences:

I ate my dinner at eight o’clock. (Ate, eight)

Come here and you can hear the birds sing. (Here, hear)

Are you sure you won’t walk along the shore? (Sure, shore)

The knight went for a night out. (Knight, night)

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