The image presents a fun and colorful vocabulary exercise focused on words that contain the
"a-e" pattern, which is commonly used in English to represent the long "a" sound (like in "cake" or "plane"). The central clue is the phrase
"a-e" inside a cloud, suggesting we need to identify words that follow this spelling pattern.
Let’s go through each word and image in the picture:
1.
lake – Yes, it ends with "a-e", and has the long "a" sound.
2.
tape – Yes, "a-e" at the end, long "a" sound.
3.
snake – Yes, "a-e" pattern, long "a".
4.
safe – Yes, "a-e" ending, long "a".
5.
cake – Yes, clearly "a-e" pattern, long "a".
6.
plate – Yes, "a-e" ending, long "a".
7.
rake – Yes, "a-e" pattern, long "a".
8.
date – Yes, "a-e" ending, long "a".
9.
grape – Yes, "a-e" pattern, long "a".
10.
plane – Yes, "a-e" ending, long "a".
11.
mane – Yes, "a-e" ending, long "a".
Now, let's check if all the words shown actually have the
"a-e" pattern:
-
lake ✔
-
tape ✔
-
snake ✔
-
safe ✔
-
cake ✔
-
plate ✔
-
rake ✔
-
date ✔
-
grape ✔
-
plane ✔
-
mane ✔
✔ All 11 words listed in the image follow the
"a-e" spelling pattern and produce the
long "a" sound.
Conclusion:
This image is likely a teaching tool for early readers to recognize the
"a-e" pattern (also known as the "magic e" rule), where the letter
"e" at the end of a word makes the preceding
"a" say its name (long "a").
Final Answer:
All the words in the image —
lake, tape, snake, safe, cake, plate, rake, date, grape, plane, mane — follow the
"a-e" pattern and are correct examples of words where the
"e" at the end makes the
"a" say its long vowel sound.
👉
Task Solved: The purpose was to identify or reinforce words with the
"a-e" pattern, and all the labeled words in the image correctly demonstrate this phonics rule.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of a e worksheet.