Homophone in a sentence as a noun

Also, Daesh is a homophone with a french slang word for semen.

The number of homophone "mixups" is so high, I can't see it as anything but on purpose.

Did you really just write 40ish words belittling someone's opinion because they picked the wrong homophone?

Some of the homophone pairs the author used seem pretty dubious to me: ant/aunt, choral/coral, air/err, awed/odd, veldt/felt.

Japanese seems to have more homophones than English, and if that's true it is proportionally more difficult to translate in that regard.

If he deliberately chose it because it is a homophone and intended for either interpretation to work, then it's both.

When writing a commentary about how programmers deserve respect, having spelling/homophone errors detracts from that argument.

The narrator of the videos needs a drink of water - the smacking sounds are incredibly distracting - and the reason the name sounds so terrible is because it's a near-homophone for "Face Gash.

> brilliant gorilla marketing tacticBest homophone mistake ever.

Homophone definitions

noun

two words are homophones if they are pronounced the same way but differ in meaning or spelling or both (e.g. bare and bear)