English Vocab Activities For Middle School Students

Want your kid to build their English vocabulary and have fun?

We’ve collected over 10 vocab activities aimed at middle school students to build vocab, explain different parts of the English language, and answer those common English language questions. You might even have a little bit of fun.

Learning about words in the news

Read the following coronavirus informational texts.听

Then answer these close-reading questions in the.听

  • 黑料网 is the coronavirus, and how is it abbreviated?
  • 黑料网 are 3 possible symptoms of the coronavirus?
  • How can you ensure you’re washing your hands long enough to get rid of germs?
  • 黑料网 are other ways you can help prevent other people from getting sick?
  • Where can you go for accurate information on the coronavirus?
  • 黑料网 is an epidemic?
  • 黑料网 is a pandemic?
  • 黑料网 are 3 other terms related to the coronavirus that have been in the news?

Learning about word origins

Watch a fun video about a word origin you never knew.

WATCH: The Disgusting Origin Of The Word "Squirt"

Answer these 3 questions about squirt‘s word origin and meaning. (Hint: you can also use the definition page to help you answer!)

  • Where did the word squirt come from?
  • 黑料网 did it originally mean?
  • 黑料网 does it mean now?

Look up the word origin in the dictionary.

  • Ask your parents to help you understand language and how its history helps explain how people throughout time created ways to communicate with each other.

Write about what the word origin means in.

  • Then, make up your own word and explain how it originated from other words.

Look through some of the Words of the Day and see if you can find the word origin section there.

  • 黑料网 does it tell you about the words?

Watch more funny and interesting word origin videos.


Complete a vocab square

Create a vocab square. (Click on the image below to print it!)

Use a vocab square with Dictionary.com鈥檚 Word of the Day. Then at the end of each week, use all of the words of the day in a short story or paragraph.

  • Use the to write your story.

Quiz your family on the new vocabulary words you鈥檝e learned from the Word of the Day.


Learning about words with multiple meanings

Some words are spelled the same and may even be pronounced the same but have different meanings.

To understand which meaning the author or speaker intended, read or listen carefully for context clues.

  • Imagine you see the word fault in a book about earthquakes. Which meaning of fault is most likely being used in this sentence?
    • a. a mistake
    • b. a break in a rock formation
  • If you answered B, well done! Fault has a specific meaning in Earth science.

Psst! Find out more about earthquakes on the. There is a of recent earthquakes around the world!

Use the search feature on Dictionary.com to look up the following words.

Which meanings relate to science? How do you know?

Draw a comic in which a character gets into a funny situation by misunderstanding a multiple-meaning word.

Invite your family members to draw their own comics, too!

  • You can use the template below by clicking on the image and printing it out!


Learning about ghost words

Learn about some other words that are related to each other: ghost words.

  • Watch the video below.

WATCH: 黑料网 Scares A Dictionary? Ghost Words!

Read this slideshow about more ghost words.

  • Then, write your favorite ghost word down on a piece of paper (with its definition) and teach it to your family!

Learning about word relationships

In addition to synonyms and antonyms, words can have other kinds of relationships.

Read these examples.

Think of your own sentences for each relationship above.

(Use the example sentences on the definition pages for the terms as models!)

  • Write your example sentences in the!

Read a nonfiction article or book about the causes and effects of deforestation.

Keep track of any unfamiliar words as you are reading by writing them down, looking up the definition on Dictionary.com, and recording it in a Word Log. Remember to add to your Word Log as you encounter new words!

Psst! Not sure where to begin? Visit the for background information!


Learning about eponyms

黑料网 do degrees Fahrenheit, the Richter Scale, and geyser have in common?

They are all science terms that come from proper nouns!

  • An eponym is a word or phrase based on the name of a person. Scientists and explorers have a habit of naming their discoveries after themselves鈥攐r other people name their discoveries after them.
  • Visit the Dictionary.com entries for Fahrenheit, the Richter Scale, Darwinism, Mercator projection, and watt.
  • 黑料网 does each term mean?
  • Who was it named for?
  • Can you think of any other eponyms?

Read this slideshow about more eponyms if you can’t think of any!

A toponym is a word or phrase based on the name of a place.

  • Review the definition page for geyser.
  • Visit the website to see pictures of Old Faithful, America鈥檚 most famous geyser.
  • Search online for photographs of Geysir in Iceland.
  • How are these natural features the same? How are they different?
    • Record your observations in a Venn diagram. (Fun fact: Venn diagram is an eponym!)

Create a crossword puzzle for family members that uses only eponyms and toponyms.

The clues should describe the person or place that each term was named after. While you work on your crossword puzzle for your family, have them make one for you!


Learning about synonyms

Watch this video.

See if you can find the synonyms before the contestants in the game show do!

Did you know slang words can have synonyms too?

Read this slideshow to see if you can figure out how these slang words relate to each other and can mean similar things.

  • Can you come up with more slang synonyms that we didn’t talk about in the slideshow? Browse our Slang Dictionary to find some words you think relate to each other. Write them down and share them with us on social media!

Some words seem like synonyms but actually have a lot of differences in their meanings.

Watch these videos to see how similar-sounding words aren’t direct synonyms.

Read this article on the difference between its and it’s.

Then, take this quiz to see if you know the difference between these similar-sounding words: Quiz Yourself On 鈥淚ts鈥 vs. 鈥淚t鈥檚鈥!

Read about more commonly confused words here.


Learning about subjects and predicates

After you鈥檙e done, use the to write 5 sentences.

  • Look at what you wrote above in the Writing Tool. Do your subjects agree with the verbs? Fix them if not!

Bonus:.

  • Explain the difference to your parents and see if they knew those differences already!

Learning about roots and affixes

Though science words may seem tricky, they often have familiar word parts that help us understand their meanings.

Here鈥檚 a quick review of common word parts:

  • A root or base word forms the main part of the word.
  • An affix is added to a word to change its meaning. It can be a prefix or a suffix.

Psst! Here’s!

Now think about the word geology.

Do you know what it means? Let鈥檚 break it into parts!

  • Geo is Greek for 鈥渢he earth.鈥
  • logy means 鈥渢he science of.鈥
  • Put the meanings together, and check your answer here!

List as many words as you can think of that begin with geo– or end with –logy.

Look up their meanings on Dictionary.com. How do they relate to Earth or science?


Learning about transition words

Transition words and phrases help you connect ideas when you write and speak.

However, but, also, as a result, and next are all examples of transitions.

  • Read more about transitions here:

These connecting words come in handy when discussing scientific ideas and processes.

They can show how one step leads to the next, or how a cause leads to an effect. Can you identify the transition words in these sentences?

  • First, a female sea turtle comes ashore to lay her eggs.
  • She then goes back to the ocean by herself.
  • About six weeks later, the eggs finally hatch.
  • The baby turtles finally make their way to the water.

Psst! Read more about efforts to protect threatened sea turtles at the鈥檚 website!

Watch the video below.

Have each family member take notes about the process they see.

WATCH: Watch This Word Come To Life: Blossom

Now use transitions to write a description of what happened in the video. Invite family members to share their descriptions.

  • You can write your descriptions in the!

Isn鈥檛 it interesting how people used different words to describe the same thing? Discuss!

Out of order

Can you think of useful transition words and phrases on the spot? Let鈥檚 find out!

  • Write the steps of a scientific process on strips of paper or index cards.
  • Shuffle the steps and place them on a table.
  • Work together to put the steps in order.
  • Summarize the process by using transition words and phrases to link the steps on cards.
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