There are many, but here are three examples. UK - GA- rage MAS-sage con-TRO-versy US - ga-RAGE mas-SAGE CON-troversy
That is a difficult question to answer, without being able to hear the accents. There are many different accents in Northern Ireland. There are hard accents and soft accents. Accents differ in different places, even in local areas. There are also different ways of speaking, and words used in different parts of Northern Ireland, which is also a factor. You really have to hear an accent and the way people speak and the words they use to notice differences.
Fox and vixen are examples of words of similar origin being different because of the British dialect from which the words arose.
Homonyms refer to words that have different meanings and spelling but sound similar. Attention, infection and direction are examples of homonyms for affection.
Some examples of words in Brooklyn accents are worlds like the word three. In a Brooklyn accent, "three" is pronounced "tree." Coffee is another word that can be done in a Brooklyn accent. It can be pronounced "cawfee" instead.
There are many examples of different words that mean the same thing. Some examples of different words that mean the same thing are warm and hot and cold and freezing.
No. It is worth noting that Ireland has many accents, so there is no single Irish accent. Accents in the west of Ireland are very different than those in the east etc. Wherever you go in Ireland you will find different accents. To hear Irish accents, try looking at videos or listening to Irish radio stations. Many broadcast on the internet.
Synonym = words that are similar and substitutable in meaning eg., similar - alike, help - assist Antonyn = words with opposite meaning eg., love - hate, hot - cold Homonym = words similar in spelling or sound but with different meanings eg., break - brake, pair - pare, bank (embankmant) bank - where money is held
They are homographs.
similar, same, indifferent,
Yes, how about the word no? Or nothing, Australians speak English for the most part. They just use different slang and they have accents.
E can be pronounced in different ways in Britain, depending on the actual words it is in, and the many different accents that you would find in Britain. So there is no single answer to the question.
contrast, change, opposition