Homophones Advanced

Homophones (Advanced) for Kids | Tricky Pairs Even Adults Confuse! | Grade 4 | English1to5.com
⭐ Grade 4 • Word Power • Topic 4 of 6👂

Homophones (Advanced)

Tricky Pairs Even Adults Confuse!

Master the most commonly confused homophones in English!

📖 Let’s Learn Homophones (Advanced)!

In Grade 3, you learned basic homophones (to/too/two, their/there). Now in Grade 4, let’s tackle advanced homophones that even adults get wrong! These are words like affect/effect, principal/principle, and accept/except.

Getting these right will make your writing more accurate and impressive. These are frequently tested in school exams and competitive tests. Master them now and you’ll have an edge forever!

💡 The Rule

Advanced homophones sound the same but have very different meanings. The only way to use them correctly is to understand the meaning and memorize which spelling goes with which meaning.

🎯 Key Concept

👂 affect / effect — affect = verb (to change), effect = noun (the result)
👂 accept / except — accept = receive, except = leave out
👂 principal / principle — principal = head of school, principle = a rule or belief

📋 Advanced Homophone Pairs

🔄
affect / effect

affect = verb (changes), effect = noun (result)

accept / except

accept = receive/agree, except = leave out/exclude

🏫
principal / principle

principal = school head, principle = moral rule

📎
stationary / stationery

stationary = not moving, stationery = pens and paper

💬
advice / advise

advice = noun (suggestion), advise = verb (to suggest)

👏
complement / compliment

complement = complete, compliment = praise

👂 Examples & Practice

Learn with organized examples and sentences!

🔄

affect vs effect

affect (verb)
to change or influence something
“The rain will affect our picnic plans.”
effect (noun)
the result or outcome
“The effect of the rain was a cancelled picnic.”
Memory trick
A = Action (verb), E = End result (noun)
“A for Affect = Action. E for Effect = End result.”
Example pair
both in one sentence
“How will this AFFECT the students? What is the EFFECT on exam results?”

accept vs except

accept (verb)
to receive or agree to something
“I accept your invitation to the party.”
except (preposition)
not including, leaving out
“Everyone came except Rahul — he was sick.”
Memory trick
EX = EXclude, AC = ACquire/take
“EXcept = EXclude (leave out). ACcept = ACquire (take in).”
Example pair
both in one sentence
“I ACCEPT all the rules EXCEPT the last one.”
🏫

principal vs principle

principal (noun/adj)
head of school, or main/chief
“The principal announced a holiday.”
principle (noun)
a rule, belief, or moral standard
“Honesty is an important principle.”
Memory trick
principAL = A person (PAL = friend)
“The principAL is your PAL. A principLE is a ruLE.”
Example pair
both in one sentence
“The PRINCIPAL taught us the PRINCIPLE of honesty.”
⚠️

More Tricky Pairs

stationary vs stationery
stationary = still, stationery = paper/pens
“The car was STATIONARY. I bought STATIONERY from the shop.”
advice vs advise
advice = noun, advise = verb
“She gave me good ADVICE. I ADVISE you to study hard.”
lose vs loose
lose = fail to keep, loose = not tight
“Don’t LOSE your keys! This shirt is too LOOSE.”
quite vs quiet
quite = fairly/rather, quiet = silent
“The test was QUITE hard. Please be QUIET in the library.”
weather vs whether
weather = climate, whether = if
“The WEATHER is nice. I wonder WHETHER it will rain.”

📢 Read & Say the Pairs

Say each pair — notice the different meanings!

affect (verb) / effect (noun)accept (receive) / except (exclude)principal (person) / principle (rule)stationary (still) / stationery (paper)advice (noun) / advise (verb)lose (fail) / loose (not tight)quite (fairly) / quiet (silent)weather (climate) / whether (if)

✏️ Choose the Right Word

Choose the right answer!

1. The rain will ___ our plans. (change)

2. Everyone came ___ Priya. (not including)

3. The ___ of our school is Mrs. Sharma. (head)

4. Please buy some ___ from the shop. (pens, paper)

5. She gave me good ___. (suggestion – noun)

🎯 Which Spelling?

Click each to reveal the correct word!

Click any to check!

📝 Sentence Reading Practice

Read carefully — the right word is used!

1

How will the new rule affect students? The effect will be positive.

2

I accept all the conditions except the fee increase.

3

Our principal Mrs. Sharma believes in the principle of fairness.

4

The stationary bus waited while I bought stationery.

5

My teacher advised me to follow her advice about reading daily.

6

Don’t lose that button — your shirt is already loose!

🧠

Memory Trick

The Ultimate Memory Tricks:
Affect = Action (verb). Effect = End result (noun).
PrincipAL = your PAL (person). PrincipLE = ruLE (belief).
StationERY = papER (things). StationARY = stAnding still.

🎮 Homophones (Advanced) Quiz

Test what you’ve learned!

“Affect” is usually a…

“Effect” is usually a…

“Everyone came ___ Rahul.” (not including)

The head of a school is the…

Pens and paper are called…

“Advice” is a ___, “advise” is a ___.

“Lose” means to fail to keep. “Loose” means…

Which memory trick helps with principal?

🎉 Quiz Complete!

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🌟

Fun Facts

The affect/effect confusion is the #1 most common grammar mistake in English writing worldwide! Even professional writers struggle with it.

English has about 400 sets of homophones. The reason? English borrowed words from French, Latin, German, and Norse — different origins, same pronunciation!

🧠 Tips for Parents

👂

Daily Corrections

When your child writes “effect” as a verb, gently correct: “Remember, A for Action = AFFECT!” Consistent correction builds habit.

📝

Homophone Sentences

Write sentences using BOTH words: “The AFFECT was immediate; the EFFECT was lasting.” Seeing them together clarifies.

🎮

Quiz Each Other

Make it a game! “Spell the word that means ‘school head’!” “P-R-I-N-C-I-P-A-L!” Quick daily practice.

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