Preview of Learn Swedish: Vegetables – Word Search for Kids

Learn Swedish: picture word search

Learn Swedish: Vegetables – Word Search for Kids

BeginnerSwedish · Vocabulary

Find the hidden Swedish words! In this puzzle the names of the carrots, peas and pumpkins sit buried in a letter grid — some across, some down, sometimes on a slant — and your child circles each one. Hunting for the Swedish words, your child reads through the rows, recognizes a word they have begun to know, and rings it. This is exactly how early readers in a new language build a store of words they spot instantly: by meeting the written Swedish word again and again and catching it whole. The picture list removes any guessing, so your child can scan the grid with calm, growing confidence. With short, familiar Swedish words, every search is a steady, satisfying hunt rather than a struggle.

Finding Swedish words in a grid is reading in a playful disguise: your child has to recognize a whole, familiar word among scattered letters and ring it. That makes it good early practice in a new language — your child reads across and down, watches for a Swedish word they know, and catches it on sight. The familiar carrots, peas and pumpkins keep the hidden words short and recognizable, and a child who hunts for a Swedish word and finds it remembers it more readily than one who only reads it once. With no timer and no score, the search stays calm and the small wins add up. 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 feelings and the ones with hospital 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 vegetables 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.

Try it — interactive

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