Homographs — Same Spelling, Different Sound
50 words spelled the same but pronounced differently depending on meaning!
💡 Why Learn Homographs — Same Spelling, Different Sound?
Homographs are the opposite of homophones: they’re spelled the same but pronounced DIFFERENTLY! ‘Read’ can be REED (present) or RED (past). ‘Lead’ can be LEED (guide) or LED (metal). ‘Bow’ can be BOW (weapon) or BOW (bend). Same letters, different sounds!
These cause real confusion for Indian students because you can’t tell the pronunciation from spelling alone — you need context! This page covers 50 of the most important homographs with both pronunciations, meanings, and example sentences.
Most Common Homographs (10 Words)
Noun vs Verb Stress Shifts (10 Words)
Words with Completely Different Sounds (10 Words)
More Tricky Homographs (10 Words)
Context Practice — Which Sound? (10 Words)
📏 Rules & Patterns
Homographs = Same Spelling, Different Sound
Unlike homophones (same sound, different spelling), homographs are spelled the same but pronounced differently based on meaning.
Noun vs Verb Stress Rule
Many 2-syllable words shift stress: NOUN = first syllable, VERB = second syllable. This is a very reliable pattern.
-ATE Endings: Noun/Adj = -ut, Verb = -ayt
Words ending in -ate shift pronunciation: nouns/adjectives use ‘-ut’, verbs use ‘-ayt’.
Noun = S Sound, Verb = Z Sound
Some words change S to Z between noun and verb forms: use, abuse, excuse, house.
Only Context Tells You the Sound
You can’t know the pronunciation from spelling alone — you must read the whole sentence to know which meaning (and sound) is intended.
🎮 Quiz — Test Your Knowledge!
🧠 Parent Tips
One Word Per Day
Pick one word each morning. Use it in 3 sentences during the day. Consistent practice beats cramming!
Learn the Patterns
Don’t memorize each word separately — learn the rules above. Once you know “K before N = silent K”, you’ll get ALL those words right!
Watch & Listen
English cartoons and movies help kids hear correct pronunciation naturally. Turn on subtitles so they connect spelling with sound.
Encourage, Don’t Correct Harshly
Say “Actually, this word is said like…” gently. Never mock a child for mispronouncing — confidence matters more than perfection.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the difference between homophones and homographs?
▼Homophones SOUND the same but are spelled differently (their/there). Homographs are SPELLED the same but sound different (read: REED/RED). They’re opposite concepts!
Why does ‘read’ have two pronunciations?
▼‘Read’ is one of English’s strangest words. Present tense = REED, past tense = RED. The spelling doesn’t change but the sound does! This is because the past tense was originally a different word that merged with the present form.
Is the noun/verb stress shift always reliable?
▼For 2-syllable words, it works about 90% of the time: REcord/reCORD, PERmit/perMIT, PROject/proJECT. But some words don’t shift: reQUEST, resPECT have the same stress as both noun and verb.
How to teach homographs to kids?
▼Use sentence pairs! ‘The wind (WIND) blew hard. Wind (WYND) the toy.’ Having both meanings side by side helps kids see how context changes pronunciation. The quiz on this page is great practice.
Are homographs unique to English?
▼No, many languages have homographs! But English has an unusually large number because it borrowed from so many languages and pronunciation changed over centuries while spelling stayed fixed.