This goes out to all the red hats out there who need to learn:
1. how to spell secede.
2. what all this talk of secession really makes you look like.
3. you're not welcome on this blog. These aren't even homophones, dimwits.
A visual exploration of words that look the same, sound the same, or are otherwise easily confused. Updated weakly through 2016, now only occasionally. The book version "Homophones Visualized" is available wherever books are sold. Thanks for checking in!
This goes out to all the red hats out there who need to learn:
1. how to spell secede.
2. what all this talk of secession really makes you look like.
3. you're not welcome on this blog. These aren't even homophones, dimwits.
With an E – (v.) literally, to remove a fuse. Metaphorically, to make a situation less dangerous.
With an I and two Fs – (v.) to scatter or spread thinly.
(By the way, the adjective form of Diffuse has essentially the same meaning as the verb, but is pronounced with a hard S sound at the end, rather than the Z sound used here. Homographs!) :)
I thought this might be a good one for today since Tuesday is election day here in the US. Two homophones, and a third word thrown in for good measure. While "decent" isn't pronounced the same as the other two, it is easily confused on the page. So I thought it was a good idea to include it here.
Decent (DEE-sent) – good, kind, caring
Descent (di-SENT) – moving downward
Dissent (di-SENT) – protest