Homophones are words that have exactly the same sound (pronunciation) but different meanings and (usually) spelling.
For example, the following two words have the same sound, but different meanings and spelling:
hour
our
Usually, homophones are in groups of two (our, hour), but occasionally they can be in groups of three (to, too, two) or even more. If we take our bear example, we can add another word to the group:
bear (noun: large, heavy animal with thick fur)
bear (verb: tolerate, endure)
bare (adjective: naked, without clothes)
1) his shop was broken in twice in a single month.
2) yes, the police managed to catch the thieves after 3 weeks.
3) bought a camera
4) £150
Answer:
the number one I say no for number two I say yes for number three I say yes and for number four I say no
Explanation:
I think that because number three number four talk about important things
A sensory details is use by the writer to connects the reader's five senses (sight, sound, smell, taste and touch) to an image or a description. The writer gives an image of ears with gray hair. From that image, the writer show us an estimated age of the character he's referring.