Homophone Riddle 7

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP











up vote
9
down vote

favorite












This one can't be hard.




These homophones deal with money

I can have a person on me

Or I could have a flower

When they get to one hundred they use paper




What are the homophones?



Hint:




Think about coins, not value











share|improve this question



















  • 2




    Been waiting for this. (+1) :D
    – Kevin L
    Oct 4 at 2:54










  • Having trouble making a hint...
    – Duck
    2 days ago














up vote
9
down vote

favorite












This one can't be hard.




These homophones deal with money

I can have a person on me

Or I could have a flower

When they get to one hundred they use paper




What are the homophones?



Hint:




Think about coins, not value











share|improve this question



















  • 2




    Been waiting for this. (+1) :D
    – Kevin L
    Oct 4 at 2:54










  • Having trouble making a hint...
    – Duck
    2 days ago












up vote
9
down vote

favorite









up vote
9
down vote

favorite











This one can't be hard.




These homophones deal with money

I can have a person on me

Or I could have a flower

When they get to one hundred they use paper




What are the homophones?



Hint:




Think about coins, not value











share|improve this question















This one can't be hard.




These homophones deal with money

I can have a person on me

Or I could have a flower

When they get to one hundred they use paper




What are the homophones?



Hint:




Think about coins, not value








riddle word






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday

























asked Oct 4 at 2:50









Duck

887114




887114







  • 2




    Been waiting for this. (+1) :D
    – Kevin L
    Oct 4 at 2:54










  • Having trouble making a hint...
    – Duck
    2 days ago












  • 2




    Been waiting for this. (+1) :D
    – Kevin L
    Oct 4 at 2:54










  • Having trouble making a hint...
    – Duck
    2 days ago







2




2




Been waiting for this. (+1) :D
– Kevin L
Oct 4 at 2:54




Been waiting for this. (+1) :D
– Kevin L
Oct 4 at 2:54












Having trouble making a hint...
– Duck
2 days ago




Having trouble making a hint...
– Duck
2 days ago










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote



accepted










You’re talking about




PENNY and PENNI.




These homophones deal with money




A Penny is one cent, equal to one hundredth of a dollar. A Penni is a Finnish currency unit, equal to one hundredth of a markka.




I can have a person on me




Could be Queen Elizabeth II, at least for the old Canadian pennies.




Or I could have a flower




A Finnish penni can have a flower on it.




When they get to one hundred they use paper




One hundred pennies is a paper US dollar. One hundred pennis is a paper Finnish markka.







share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Yay! This is it! :) +1
    – Duck
    11 hours ago

















up vote
10
down vote













These homophones deal with money




Could they be scent and cent? Maybe also bill and Bill or Ben and Ben? (I'm not sure how many to find.)




I can have a person on me




A cent or a bill can have a person on you, a Ben (Franklin) is a US one hundred.




Or I could have a flower




Flowers have scents




They both come from one hundred




Cent is French for one hundred, and a Ben is a US one hundred.







share|improve this answer




















  • You're on the scent but not quite! :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 4 at 3:17











  • flowers have scents, but scents don't have a flower :P
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago










  • @Duck - is it just the reasoning that is wrong? or are the homophones wrong
    – deep thought
    yesterday











  • Probably doesn't count, and is in the wrong direction, but there is the U.S. wheat penny, which has at one point featured two ears of wheat that are post flowering stage.
    – a sandwhich
    yesterday










  • The homophones are wrong, but @asandwhich is so close if you don't go on with the wheat
    – Duck
    yesterday

















up vote
2
down vote













These homophones deal with money




saint and cent

(saint helenian pounds(shp) is a currency)




I can have a person on me or I could have a flower




the cents have person or flower engraved on them

(for example canadian cent has flower on one side and person on other side)




When they get to one hundred they use paper




100 cent = 1 dollar paper note







share|improve this answer






















  • Sorry, but nope :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 5 at 0:19

















up vote
2
down vote













fun answer - Is it..




Me? (Cashbee)




These homophones deal with money




Cashbee




I can have a person on me




I love giving piggyback rides




Or I could have a flower




As a bee, I love flowers




When they get to one hundred they use paper




I can't count over a hundred in my head. I need to write the numbers down from that point on.







share|improve this answer




















  • If fun answer like this one are not welcome, please let me know and I will stop posting them (as long as I'm certain that they're incorrect like this one)
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago











  • They are very much welcome but for this one maybe you could have said it in the comments but this is not a homophone pair :) +1
    – Duck
    2 days ago










  • Also, how would I know that you like to give piggy-back rides?
    – Duck
    2 days ago

















up vote
2
down vote













I suppose it's




penny and peony




which are




a coin(which can have people on it, and when you have 100 pennies it is equivalent to a dollar bill) and a flower respectively







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • Penny is right, but peony isn't. Nice job, though and have fun puzzling +1
    – Duck
    yesterday










  • @Duck Woohoo, I can finally put my bots into action :)
    – Quintec
    10 hours ago










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5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes








5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
3
down vote



accepted










You’re talking about




PENNY and PENNI.




These homophones deal with money




A Penny is one cent, equal to one hundredth of a dollar. A Penni is a Finnish currency unit, equal to one hundredth of a markka.




I can have a person on me




Could be Queen Elizabeth II, at least for the old Canadian pennies.




Or I could have a flower




A Finnish penni can have a flower on it.




When they get to one hundred they use paper




One hundred pennies is a paper US dollar. One hundred pennis is a paper Finnish markka.







share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Yay! This is it! :) +1
    – Duck
    11 hours ago














up vote
3
down vote



accepted










You’re talking about




PENNY and PENNI.




These homophones deal with money




A Penny is one cent, equal to one hundredth of a dollar. A Penni is a Finnish currency unit, equal to one hundredth of a markka.




I can have a person on me




Could be Queen Elizabeth II, at least for the old Canadian pennies.




Or I could have a flower




A Finnish penni can have a flower on it.




When they get to one hundred they use paper




One hundred pennies is a paper US dollar. One hundred pennis is a paper Finnish markka.







share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Yay! This is it! :) +1
    – Duck
    11 hours ago












up vote
3
down vote



accepted







up vote
3
down vote



accepted






You’re talking about




PENNY and PENNI.




These homophones deal with money




A Penny is one cent, equal to one hundredth of a dollar. A Penni is a Finnish currency unit, equal to one hundredth of a markka.




I can have a person on me




Could be Queen Elizabeth II, at least for the old Canadian pennies.




Or I could have a flower




A Finnish penni can have a flower on it.




When they get to one hundred they use paper




One hundred pennies is a paper US dollar. One hundred pennis is a paper Finnish markka.







share|improve this answer












You’re talking about




PENNY and PENNI.




These homophones deal with money




A Penny is one cent, equal to one hundredth of a dollar. A Penni is a Finnish currency unit, equal to one hundredth of a markka.




I can have a person on me




Could be Queen Elizabeth II, at least for the old Canadian pennies.




Or I could have a flower




A Finnish penni can have a flower on it.




When they get to one hundred they use paper




One hundred pennies is a paper US dollar. One hundred pennis is a paper Finnish markka.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 23 hours ago









El-Guest

14.4k3269




14.4k3269







  • 1




    Yay! This is it! :) +1
    – Duck
    11 hours ago












  • 1




    Yay! This is it! :) +1
    – Duck
    11 hours ago







1




1




Yay! This is it! :) +1
– Duck
11 hours ago




Yay! This is it! :) +1
– Duck
11 hours ago










up vote
10
down vote













These homophones deal with money




Could they be scent and cent? Maybe also bill and Bill or Ben and Ben? (I'm not sure how many to find.)




I can have a person on me




A cent or a bill can have a person on you, a Ben (Franklin) is a US one hundred.




Or I could have a flower




Flowers have scents




They both come from one hundred




Cent is French for one hundred, and a Ben is a US one hundred.







share|improve this answer




















  • You're on the scent but not quite! :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 4 at 3:17











  • flowers have scents, but scents don't have a flower :P
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago










  • @Duck - is it just the reasoning that is wrong? or are the homophones wrong
    – deep thought
    yesterday











  • Probably doesn't count, and is in the wrong direction, but there is the U.S. wheat penny, which has at one point featured two ears of wheat that are post flowering stage.
    – a sandwhich
    yesterday










  • The homophones are wrong, but @asandwhich is so close if you don't go on with the wheat
    – Duck
    yesterday














up vote
10
down vote













These homophones deal with money




Could they be scent and cent? Maybe also bill and Bill or Ben and Ben? (I'm not sure how many to find.)




I can have a person on me




A cent or a bill can have a person on you, a Ben (Franklin) is a US one hundred.




Or I could have a flower




Flowers have scents




They both come from one hundred




Cent is French for one hundred, and a Ben is a US one hundred.







share|improve this answer




















  • You're on the scent but not quite! :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 4 at 3:17











  • flowers have scents, but scents don't have a flower :P
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago










  • @Duck - is it just the reasoning that is wrong? or are the homophones wrong
    – deep thought
    yesterday











  • Probably doesn't count, and is in the wrong direction, but there is the U.S. wheat penny, which has at one point featured two ears of wheat that are post flowering stage.
    – a sandwhich
    yesterday










  • The homophones are wrong, but @asandwhich is so close if you don't go on with the wheat
    – Duck
    yesterday












up vote
10
down vote










up vote
10
down vote









These homophones deal with money




Could they be scent and cent? Maybe also bill and Bill or Ben and Ben? (I'm not sure how many to find.)




I can have a person on me




A cent or a bill can have a person on you, a Ben (Franklin) is a US one hundred.




Or I could have a flower




Flowers have scents




They both come from one hundred




Cent is French for one hundred, and a Ben is a US one hundred.







share|improve this answer












These homophones deal with money




Could they be scent and cent? Maybe also bill and Bill or Ben and Ben? (I'm not sure how many to find.)




I can have a person on me




A cent or a bill can have a person on you, a Ben (Franklin) is a US one hundred.




Or I could have a flower




Flowers have scents




They both come from one hundred




Cent is French for one hundred, and a Ben is a US one hundred.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Oct 4 at 2:55









El-Guest

14.4k3269




14.4k3269











  • You're on the scent but not quite! :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 4 at 3:17











  • flowers have scents, but scents don't have a flower :P
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago










  • @Duck - is it just the reasoning that is wrong? or are the homophones wrong
    – deep thought
    yesterday











  • Probably doesn't count, and is in the wrong direction, but there is the U.S. wheat penny, which has at one point featured two ears of wheat that are post flowering stage.
    – a sandwhich
    yesterday










  • The homophones are wrong, but @asandwhich is so close if you don't go on with the wheat
    – Duck
    yesterday
















  • You're on the scent but not quite! :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 4 at 3:17











  • flowers have scents, but scents don't have a flower :P
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago










  • @Duck - is it just the reasoning that is wrong? or are the homophones wrong
    – deep thought
    yesterday











  • Probably doesn't count, and is in the wrong direction, but there is the U.S. wheat penny, which has at one point featured two ears of wheat that are post flowering stage.
    – a sandwhich
    yesterday










  • The homophones are wrong, but @asandwhich is so close if you don't go on with the wheat
    – Duck
    yesterday















You're on the scent but not quite! :) +1
– Duck
Oct 4 at 3:17





You're on the scent but not quite! :) +1
– Duck
Oct 4 at 3:17













flowers have scents, but scents don't have a flower :P
– Cashbee
2 days ago




flowers have scents, but scents don't have a flower :P
– Cashbee
2 days ago












@Duck - is it just the reasoning that is wrong? or are the homophones wrong
– deep thought
yesterday





@Duck - is it just the reasoning that is wrong? or are the homophones wrong
– deep thought
yesterday













Probably doesn't count, and is in the wrong direction, but there is the U.S. wheat penny, which has at one point featured two ears of wheat that are post flowering stage.
– a sandwhich
yesterday




Probably doesn't count, and is in the wrong direction, but there is the U.S. wheat penny, which has at one point featured two ears of wheat that are post flowering stage.
– a sandwhich
yesterday












The homophones are wrong, but @asandwhich is so close if you don't go on with the wheat
– Duck
yesterday




The homophones are wrong, but @asandwhich is so close if you don't go on with the wheat
– Duck
yesterday










up vote
2
down vote













These homophones deal with money




saint and cent

(saint helenian pounds(shp) is a currency)




I can have a person on me or I could have a flower




the cents have person or flower engraved on them

(for example canadian cent has flower on one side and person on other side)




When they get to one hundred they use paper




100 cent = 1 dollar paper note







share|improve this answer






















  • Sorry, but nope :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 5 at 0:19














up vote
2
down vote













These homophones deal with money




saint and cent

(saint helenian pounds(shp) is a currency)




I can have a person on me or I could have a flower




the cents have person or flower engraved on them

(for example canadian cent has flower on one side and person on other side)




When they get to one hundred they use paper




100 cent = 1 dollar paper note







share|improve this answer






















  • Sorry, but nope :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 5 at 0:19












up vote
2
down vote










up vote
2
down vote









These homophones deal with money




saint and cent

(saint helenian pounds(shp) is a currency)




I can have a person on me or I could have a flower




the cents have person or flower engraved on them

(for example canadian cent has flower on one side and person on other side)




When they get to one hundred they use paper




100 cent = 1 dollar paper note







share|improve this answer














These homophones deal with money




saint and cent

(saint helenian pounds(shp) is a currency)




I can have a person on me or I could have a flower




the cents have person or flower engraved on them

(for example canadian cent has flower on one side and person on other side)




When they get to one hundred they use paper




100 cent = 1 dollar paper note








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Oct 4 at 10:46









Shahriar Mahmud Sajid

3,169528




3,169528










answered Oct 4 at 10:36









Komal Pathade

913




913











  • Sorry, but nope :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 5 at 0:19
















  • Sorry, but nope :) +1
    – Duck
    Oct 5 at 0:19















Sorry, but nope :) +1
– Duck
Oct 5 at 0:19




Sorry, but nope :) +1
– Duck
Oct 5 at 0:19










up vote
2
down vote













fun answer - Is it..




Me? (Cashbee)




These homophones deal with money




Cashbee




I can have a person on me




I love giving piggyback rides




Or I could have a flower




As a bee, I love flowers




When they get to one hundred they use paper




I can't count over a hundred in my head. I need to write the numbers down from that point on.







share|improve this answer




















  • If fun answer like this one are not welcome, please let me know and I will stop posting them (as long as I'm certain that they're incorrect like this one)
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago











  • They are very much welcome but for this one maybe you could have said it in the comments but this is not a homophone pair :) +1
    – Duck
    2 days ago










  • Also, how would I know that you like to give piggy-back rides?
    – Duck
    2 days ago














up vote
2
down vote













fun answer - Is it..




Me? (Cashbee)




These homophones deal with money




Cashbee




I can have a person on me




I love giving piggyback rides




Or I could have a flower




As a bee, I love flowers




When they get to one hundred they use paper




I can't count over a hundred in my head. I need to write the numbers down from that point on.







share|improve this answer




















  • If fun answer like this one are not welcome, please let me know and I will stop posting them (as long as I'm certain that they're incorrect like this one)
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago











  • They are very much welcome but for this one maybe you could have said it in the comments but this is not a homophone pair :) +1
    – Duck
    2 days ago










  • Also, how would I know that you like to give piggy-back rides?
    – Duck
    2 days ago












up vote
2
down vote










up vote
2
down vote









fun answer - Is it..




Me? (Cashbee)




These homophones deal with money




Cashbee




I can have a person on me




I love giving piggyback rides




Or I could have a flower




As a bee, I love flowers




When they get to one hundred they use paper




I can't count over a hundred in my head. I need to write the numbers down from that point on.







share|improve this answer












fun answer - Is it..




Me? (Cashbee)




These homophones deal with money




Cashbee




I can have a person on me




I love giving piggyback rides




Or I could have a flower




As a bee, I love flowers




When they get to one hundred they use paper




I can't count over a hundred in my head. I need to write the numbers down from that point on.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 days ago









Cashbee

1,36515




1,36515











  • If fun answer like this one are not welcome, please let me know and I will stop posting them (as long as I'm certain that they're incorrect like this one)
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago











  • They are very much welcome but for this one maybe you could have said it in the comments but this is not a homophone pair :) +1
    – Duck
    2 days ago










  • Also, how would I know that you like to give piggy-back rides?
    – Duck
    2 days ago
















  • If fun answer like this one are not welcome, please let me know and I will stop posting them (as long as I'm certain that they're incorrect like this one)
    – Cashbee
    2 days ago











  • They are very much welcome but for this one maybe you could have said it in the comments but this is not a homophone pair :) +1
    – Duck
    2 days ago










  • Also, how would I know that you like to give piggy-back rides?
    – Duck
    2 days ago















If fun answer like this one are not welcome, please let me know and I will stop posting them (as long as I'm certain that they're incorrect like this one)
– Cashbee
2 days ago





If fun answer like this one are not welcome, please let me know and I will stop posting them (as long as I'm certain that they're incorrect like this one)
– Cashbee
2 days ago













They are very much welcome but for this one maybe you could have said it in the comments but this is not a homophone pair :) +1
– Duck
2 days ago




They are very much welcome but for this one maybe you could have said it in the comments but this is not a homophone pair :) +1
– Duck
2 days ago












Also, how would I know that you like to give piggy-back rides?
– Duck
2 days ago




Also, how would I know that you like to give piggy-back rides?
– Duck
2 days ago










up vote
2
down vote













I suppose it's




penny and peony




which are




a coin(which can have people on it, and when you have 100 pennies it is equivalent to a dollar bill) and a flower respectively







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • Penny is right, but peony isn't. Nice job, though and have fun puzzling +1
    – Duck
    yesterday










  • @Duck Woohoo, I can finally put my bots into action :)
    – Quintec
    10 hours ago














up vote
2
down vote













I suppose it's




penny and peony




which are




a coin(which can have people on it, and when you have 100 pennies it is equivalent to a dollar bill) and a flower respectively







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • Penny is right, but peony isn't. Nice job, though and have fun puzzling +1
    – Duck
    yesterday










  • @Duck Woohoo, I can finally put my bots into action :)
    – Quintec
    10 hours ago












up vote
2
down vote










up vote
2
down vote









I suppose it's




penny and peony




which are




a coin(which can have people on it, and when you have 100 pennies it is equivalent to a dollar bill) and a flower respectively







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









I suppose it's




penny and peony




which are




a coin(which can have people on it, and when you have 100 pennies it is equivalent to a dollar bill) and a flower respectively








share|improve this answer








New contributor




Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer






New contributor




Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









answered yesterday









Quark

213




213




New contributor




Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Quark is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











  • Penny is right, but peony isn't. Nice job, though and have fun puzzling +1
    – Duck
    yesterday










  • @Duck Woohoo, I can finally put my bots into action :)
    – Quintec
    10 hours ago
















  • Penny is right, but peony isn't. Nice job, though and have fun puzzling +1
    – Duck
    yesterday










  • @Duck Woohoo, I can finally put my bots into action :)
    – Quintec
    10 hours ago















Penny is right, but peony isn't. Nice job, though and have fun puzzling +1
– Duck
yesterday




Penny is right, but peony isn't. Nice job, though and have fun puzzling +1
– Duck
yesterday












@Duck Woohoo, I can finally put my bots into action :)
– Quintec
10 hours ago




@Duck Woohoo, I can finally put my bots into action :)
– Quintec
10 hours ago

















 

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