(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
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Use the letters in Summer Reading Bingo Challange to make as many smaller words as you can
Take
a book, and try to
find at least one word
that ends with each of
these suffixes: -ous,
-ive, -tion, -ize, -al, and -ness
small • happy • run •
yell • easy • strange
For each word, write
a synonym and an
antonym. Then, think
of your own set of
related words.
Use the letters in your
first and last name to
make as many smaller
words as you can.
There are three ways
to pronounce the suffix
-ed: /ed/ as in rented,
/d/ as in sailed, and /t/
as in jumped. In a book
you’re reading, find
five examples of each
sound of -ed.
Go on a prefix
scavenger hunt.
Take a book, and try
to find at least one
word that begins with
each of these prefixes:
pro-, multi-, sub-,
trans-, and con-.
The letter g can make
a hard sound (goat)
and a soft sound
(giant). Take a book,
and look for both
sounds of g. Make two
lists of words
Spring, duck, toast,
note, and park are
all multiple meaning
words. For each word,
draw a picture that
shows two different
meanings, and write a
sentence to describe ithow 2 meanings
Write one word for each of these latin roots: ject (throw), port (carry), tact (touch), rupt (break), form (make), vis (see).
Find at least ten nouns, verbs and ten adjectives
Try to find at
least one word that
ends with each of
these suffixes: -ous,
-ive, -tion, -ize, -al, and -ive
Some prefixes are
related to numbers.
Write at least one
word for each of these
prefixes: uni- (one), bi-
(two), tri- (three), quad-
(four), quint- (five), and
centi- (hundred).
Use the letters in
Summer Reading
Bingo Challenge to
make as many smaller
words as you can.