Homonyms may be homographs or homophones or both. But I'd like to suggest a portmanteau be used when a word is specifically both:
homophaph
So row (a verb meaning to propel a boat with oars) and row (a noun for a line of items) are homonyms that are both homographs and homophones and, thus, are homophaphs.
As a child who was required to recite the Pledge of Allegiance every day in elementary school in the USA, I misunderstood the line “and to the Republic for which it stands” as “and to the Republic for Witches’ stands.” I assumed we were all witches and that I would one day be able to fly until my teacher explained to me that we were never going to do anything so interesting in our lives but would be expected to work and pay taxes until we were exhausted and died.
Latine | Thursday's Child | 4:40 AM | 43% waxing crescent moon | trees | 60% Sofrito | Aquarius | film and digital photos taken by me | she/her | most posts auto-delete in 2 weekshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcodeAvi: Halftone image of me sitting with head turned to face the light. Header: Definition of thethuthinnang - "Movement of Leaves" from the Lapine language of the rabbits in Watership Down.