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The world is a play of words - Part II : know about homophone, homographs, homonyms and oronyms


“Ice creammmmm”, Saddy shouted at top of his voice. We, the group of friends were out for a casual dinner outing on Sunday evening as Shyamlal, our cook and friend, took off on Sunday evenings. As soon as the discussion on desserts started, Saddy made his choice clear. All of us knew his weakness for chocolate ice cream already. I, in a mood of having some fun (and that is my default mood most of the time, especially when my besties are around), asserted, “I don’t think you scream much. But what’s wrong today?”. Few of us laughed on the lame joke that I cracked, and few gave the uninterested, ‘No, not again’ look on my PJ. But that has never stopped me from cracking the next one, even worse PJ. Has it?
play of words


“Ice cream” and ‘I scream”: two completely different phrases, but hear someone say it, and if you don’t know the context, it is difficult to know which one he means. Oronyms, as we refer such phrases, are the similar sounding but different phrases with different meanings. At times, when these phrases are spoken, it is hard to establish when one word finishes and other begins, thus causing two phrases to sound same. Few more examples are: ‘Fork handles’ and ‘Four candles’, ‘That’s tough’ and ‘That stuff’, ‘realize, real eyes and real lies’. Wait for the nerd note to see a super interesting example in form of a poem.

Homophones are the words that have similar pronunciation, irrespective of their spellings being same or different. Homographs, on the other hand, are the words which have same spelling irrespective of their pronunciation. Combine these two, and we have words which have same pronunciation and spellings, but different meanings. Such words are known as Homonyms. This means that an example of homonym will also be an example for homophone and homograph

Few examples of homophones are: ‘site and sight’, ‘cell and sell’, ‘ate and eight’, ‘to, two and too’, 'right and write', and many more.

Examples of homographs (ones which are not homophones) are: ‘lead(as in leader, sound similar to plead) and lead(the metal, sound similar to dead)’, ‘wind(the breeze, sound similar to tinned) and wind(to turn, sound similar to kind)’, ‘sow(to plant a seed, sound similar to low) and sow(a female pig, sound similar to wow)’. These are also referred as heterophones, heteronyms

Examples of homonyms are: bat (the cricket sport equipment or an animal), Cricket (a field sport or an insect), fine (of good quality or a monetary penalty or grounded in to very small particles).
Classification of words. Image source : Wikipedia
By Homograph_homophone_venn_diagram.png: Will Heltsleyderivative work: Cmglee (talk) - Homograph_homophone_venn_diagram.png, CC BY-SA 3.0, Link

Nerd Note 1: In english language, there is only one septet of homophones, which means seven different words with different meanings and spellings but same sound. The septet is : raise, rays, rase, raze, rehs, res, réis. Try finding the meaning of last three words and tell us in comments.

Nerd Note 2: A poem ‘eye halve a spelling chequer’ by Martha Snow is a funny collection of oronyms. Read the full text of the poem here.

Remember when we talked about homological words in one of our previous posts. If you have missed that one, here is the link.

And as always, thanks for reading.
Ayush!!!


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