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Generador de homófonos
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A homophones generator gives you sets of words that sound alike but are spelled differently and mean different things, the exact traps that slip past a spellchecker. Choose how many sets you want and it returns real, commonly confused groups such as their, there, and they're, or principal and principle, ready to study or drop into a worksheet. Teachers use it to build spelling and grammar exercises, editors to remind themselves of the pairs that cause the most errors, and writers learning English to practise the distinctions that matter. Because homophones are identical to the ear, they are among the hardest mistakes to catch on a read-through, which is why a focused list is so handy. Pick a set, write a quick sentence for each word to lock in the meaning, and keep the trickiest pairs close when you proofread important text.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Choose how many homophone sets you want.
- Generate to see real, commonly confused groups.
- Write a sentence for each word to fix the meaning.
- Keep the trickiest sets handy when proofreading.
Use Cases
- •Building spelling and grammar worksheets for a class
- •Studying commonly confused word pairs
- •Reminding yourself of homophones before proofreading
- •Practising English distinctions as a learner
- •Creating quiz questions for a vocabulary game
Tips
- →Anchor each word to a short example sentence.
- →Focus on the pairs that trip you up most often.
- →Read important text aloud to catch homophone slips.
- →Group three-way sets like to, too, and two together.
FAQ
what exactly is a homophone
A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another but differs in spelling and meaning, like flour and flower. Because the ear cannot tell them apart, they are a frequent source of writing errors a spellchecker misses.
how can i memorise tricky pairs
Write one short sentence for each word in a set so the meaning is anchored to a context. Linking principle to "a rule" and principal to "the head of a school" makes the right choice automatic over time.
are these stored anywhere
No. The sets are drawn entirely in your browser from a built-in list, so nothing leaves your device. Generate as many times as you like to study different groups.
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