Learn Norwegian: picture word search
Learn Norwegian: Post Office – Word Search for Kids
Search across, search down, then circle. Each grid hides the Norwegian names of the letters, stamps and parcels among a busy field of letters, and your child’s job is to find and ring every one. Because the answers are recognizable picture-names, your child reads through the grid and spots each whole Norwegian word as it lines up. That whole-word recognition is the foundation a new-language reader stands on: a child builds a bank of Norwegian words they catch at a glance. The picture list keeps the hunt clear, so there is no guessing involved — only the calm scanning your child does at their own pace. Free to print or to play online, with no clock and no score anywhere in sight.
Early reading in a new language grows from recognizing familiar words quickly, and a word search rehearses exactly that. The picture list supplies the Norwegian words for the letters, stamps and parcels, the grid hides them, and your child supplies the careful eyes that find them. Because your child reads across rows and down columns to spot each one, it builds the on-sight recognition that learning Norwegian depends on. The words stay concrete and recognizable, and each Norwegian word your child circles is a small proof that they can catch a known word in a busy field of letters — free to print or to play online. Norwegian shares a lot of everyday words with English, so a few of them feel familiar right away.
Does your child love searching for Norwegian words? Then there is plenty more to hunt for! The word searches about the trees and the ones with Fourth of July things hide fresh pictures and new Norwegian words to find and circle. And once your child is in the swing of it, a whole free collection built around the post is ready and waiting — free to print or simply to play online. That way learning Norwegian stays varied and gives a little fresh pleasure each day, all at your child’s own pace, with no timers and no scores.