The two homophones that describe 1) being correct, and 2) the action of putting a pencil/pen to a paper
Right / Write
The two homographs that describe 1) a nocturnal mammal, and 2) a tool used to hit softballs and baseballs
Bat / Bat
The part of speech that describes a person, place, thing, or idea
A noun
The Greek root "bio"
Life
The Latin root "aud"
To hear
The two homophones that describe 1) a singular number, and 2) to achieve victory
One / Won
The two homographs that describe 1) the sound a dog makes, and 2) the rough outer exterior of a tree
Bark / Bark
The part of speech that describes an action or state of being
A verb
The Greek root "tele"
Far / far off / distant
The Latin root "rupt"
Break / burst
The two homophones that describe 1) the time between 7 pm and 4 am, and 2) a noble sir that defends his king
Night / Knight
The two homographs that describe 1) a curved piece of wood, plastic, or metal with a tight string used for shooting arrows, and 2) to bend the head or upper body forward to show respect, greet someone, or acknowledge applause
Bow / Bow
The part of speech that expresses emotion or exclamation and often stands independently
An interjection
The Greek root "photo"
Light
The Latin root "port"
To carry
The two homophones that describe 1) disagreement, and 2) understanding something
No / Know
The two homographs that describe 1) to look at and comprehend text, and 2) having looked at and comprehended text in the past
Read / Read
The part of speech that that connects words, clauses, or phrases
A conjunction
The Greek root "scope"
To view / viewing instrument
The Latin root "ject"
To throw
The two homophones that describe 1) a direction or point in space, and 2) the ownership of something by a group of people
There / Their
The two homographs that describe 1) the past action of observing and noticing something, and 2) the tool used to cut wood into pieces
Saw / Saw
The part of speech that shows the position, location, direction, or time between a noun and other words in the sentence
A preposition
The Greek root "auto"
Self
The Latin root "vid / vis"
To see