Learn Swedish: picture word search
Learn Swedish: Flowers – Word Search for Kids
This puzzle asks your child to read and search in Swedish. The names of the tulips, daisies and roses are hidden across and down in a letter grid, and your child finds each one and circles it. Reading along the rows and columns, they watch for letters that spell a Swedish word they recognize. That on-sight recognition is the first kind of reading in a new language — your child sees a whole word among the letters and knows it. The picture list gives clear clues, so the only work is the search itself. Short, familiar Swedish words mean a beginner can hunt without anything being spelled out for them, and every circle is a small sign that a Swedish word is becoming truly familiar.
The scan-and-circle routine here is the core of new-language word recognition: your child reads across and down, recognizes a familiar Swedish word in the grid, and rings it. Doing it from a known picture list of the tulips, daisies and roses keeps the search clear, so your child can concentrate on spotting whole Swedish words. Familiar words mean the hidden answers stay short and recognizable, and your child practises the exact habit that fluent reading relies on — catching known Swedish words instantly, at their own pace, with no score to chase. Swedish has three extra letters at the very end of its alphabet — a, a and o with little marks — that English does not use.
Does your child love searching for Swedish words? Then there is plenty more to hunt for! The word searches about the weather and the ones with animals hide fresh pictures and new Swedish words to find and circle. And once your child is in the swing of it, a whole free collection built around the flowers is ready and waiting — free to print or simply to play online. That way learning Swedish stays varied and gives a little fresh pleasure each day, all at your child’s own pace, with no timers and no scores.