Learn Swedish: picture word search
Learn Swedish: Fruits – Word Search for Kids
In this puzzle the picture list sets the Swedish words and the grid hides them. Hunting for the apples, bananas and pears, your child reads across the rows and down the columns until a familiar Swedish word appears among the letters, then circles it. This is reading and recognizing — your child spots a Swedish word they already know rather than sounding out something new. The pictures keep the answers concrete and clear, so all of your child’s attention goes to the search: scanning carefully, recognizing each Swedish word, and ringing it. Short, familiar words make every hidden answer findable, so a beginner can move through the grid steadily, gathering a quiet sense that they really are starting to read their first Swedish words.
Recognizing a familiar word among many letters is the reading foundation a new-language learner builds on. A word search rehearses it cleanly: your child knows which Swedish words to find and has to spot them in the grid. Keeping the fruit short and familiar means a child can scan a row, catch a Swedish word they know, and circle it, building real independence with the words they will use most. There is no timer here and no winning, only the calm, satisfying hunt that lets your child meet each written Swedish word again and make it their own. 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 zoo animals and the ones with supermarket things 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 fruit 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.