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Homophones

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George38 | 15:58 Tue 03rd Nov 2015 | ChatterBank
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I work in a college that cites to students that words like whale and wail, where and were, which and witch are homophones. I think this is wrong as I feel they are not true homophones as they are pronounced slightly differently. Am I correct, or am I just being picky?
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I also think that they aren't homophones.
Where/wear (not were) are pronounced the same aren't they, as are which/witch and whale/wail? May depend on regional accents of course.
You are correct. Read (past tense) and red are true homophones.
Homophones: communication devices used by the gay community ;o)
are wail and whale pronounced differently?
where and were are though
I would agree with you George.

The BBC are the greatest offenders in mispronouncing the three examples which you have cited.

As a Scot I wince every time I hear them misusing the Queen's English.
LOL @ The Builder.
wear/were are homophones but not where
Words beginning with wh have an h sound at the beginning; so hwale, but wail.
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I am also a Scot SirOracle which gave rise to my question in the first place. I feel that the examples that I mentioned should be pronounced as in the Queens English as opposed to regional dialects.
wear/were are not homophones.
They are not homophones.
IMO at a pinch you could suggest there is a subtle difference Wail/Whale and Witch/Which, due to the 'h', and a lesser extent the 't'; but for the majority of English speakers I reckon they would be pronounced identically. As folk have pointed out though, there is a large difference between Were and Where.
But we're is often pronounced as wear
Not by anyone I know.
We're is pronounced we ur
yeah you're right
I think people are identifying the vowel change in some dialects

but yes I recollect which and where were aspirated hware and hwich
I havent heard it pronounced like that for fifty years tho

Clare and Cher are true rhymes in Liverpool tho; Clare rhymes with 'were' up there in case you were wondering what violence was visited on those two innocents
yeah the 't' in wail and whale - see above
I make sure I pronounce it every time
Clare and cher rhyme everywhere?

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