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Write Words Worksheet for Kids - Fill in the Blanks Below Each Picture

A colorful educational worksheet for children to practice writing words, featuring images of a bicycle, horse, raindrops, house, tiger, sheep, child, tooth, and mango, with partially filled word blanks.

A colorful educational worksheet for children to practice writing words, featuring images of a bicycle, horse, raindrops, house, tiger, sheep, child, tooth, and mango, with partially filled word blanks.

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Show Answer Key & Explanations Step-by-step solution for: Write 5 Letter Words Worksheet for Grade 2 - Kidpid
Let’s solve this step by step.

We need to fill in the blanks under each picture to spell the correct word for that image. The letters already given are hints — we just need to add the missing letters to complete the word.

---

First row:

1. Bicycle → Picture shows a bike with “c _ c _ _ _”
Let’s think: B-I-C-Y-C-L-E → but we have “c” and “c” already placed.
Actually, looking at the blanks: it’s written as “c _ c _ _ _” — wait, maybe it’s meant to be filled as:
The word is “bicycle”, so if first letter is ‘b’, then ‘i’, then ‘c’ (given), then ‘y’, then ‘c’ (given), then ‘l’, then ‘e’.
But the blanks are shown as:
`c _ c _ _ _` — that doesn’t match unless we’re starting from the third letter? That seems odd.

Wait — let me re-examine the layout.

Actually, looking again: under the bicycle, it says:

`c _ c _ _ _`

But “bicycle” has 7 letters: b-i-c-y-c-l-e

If the first blank is after “c”, that would mean the word starts with “c”? That can’t be right.

Hold on — perhaps the red letters are *already filled in*, and we need to fill the black blanks around them?

Looking at the image description:

Under bicycle: `c _ c _ _ _` — but actually, in the original problem, the red letters are pre-filled clues.

Wait — let me reinterpret based on standard worksheet design.

In such worksheets, usually, some letters are given in red as hints, and you fill the rest.

So for bicycle: the word is “bicycle”. If the pattern is:

_ _ c _ c _ _

Then: b i c y c l e → so blanks are: b, i, y, l, e → but that’s 5 blanks, and there are only 4 underscores shown? Hmm.

Wait — let’s count the underscores per item.

Looking back at user input:

For bicycle: “c _ c _ _ _” → that’s 6 characters total? No — “c” + underscore + “c” + underscore + underscore + underscore = 6 positions? But “bicycle” is 7 letters.

This is confusing. Maybe I should look at all items together.

Alternative approach: Let’s list each picture and what word it represents, then see how the blanks fit.

---

Picture 1: Bicycle → Word: bicycle

Given: c _ c _ _ _ → perhaps it's misaligned? Or maybe it's "cycle"? But picture is full bicycle.

Wait — maybe the red letters are not part of the word structure but just hints? No, they are placed within the blanks.

Let me try another way — look at second picture:

Horse → h _ _ s _ _ → horse is h-o-r-s-e → 5 letters. Blanks: h _ _ s _ _ → that’s 6 positions? Doesn't match.

Unless... perhaps the underscores represent missing letters, and red letters are fixed.

For horse: h _ _ s _ _ → if word is “horse”, then:

Position 1: h (given)

Position 2: o

Position 3: r

Position 4: s (given)

Position 5: e

But there are two more underscores? That doesn’t work.

Wait — maybe it’s “horses”? Plural? But picture is one horse.

I think I made a mistake in reading the format.

Let me go back to the user’s text representation:

They wrote:

For bicycle: `c _ c _ _ _`

But in actual worksheet, it might be that the word is split with some letters given.

Perhaps for “bicycle”, it’s intended to be filled as:

b i c y c l e → and the given letters are the two 'c's, so blanks are for b,i,y,l,e — but that’s 5 letters, and there are 4 underscores shown? Inconsistency.

Wait — let's count the underscores in the user's message:

"c _ c _ _ _" → that's: c, _, c, _, _, _ → so 6 characters total. But "bicycle" is 7 letters. So maybe it's not "bicycle".

What if it's "bike"? B-i-k-e → 4 letters. Not matching.

Another idea: perhaps the red letters are the only ones given, and we fill all blanks including before and after.

For example, for bicycle: the pattern is _ _ c _ c _ _ → 7 positions.

Yes! That makes sense. Probably in the original image, the blanks include spaces before the first red letter.

In the user's text, they may have omitted the leading blanks for brevity, but logically, for "bicycle", it should be:

_ _ c _ c _ _ → fill with b, i, y, l, e → so word is b-i-c-y-c-l-e.

Similarly for others.

Let me assume that for each item, the number of blanks plus given letters equals the length of the word.

Let’s do this systematically.

---

Row 1:

1. Bicycle → 7 letters: b-i-c-y-c-l-e
Given: c and c at positions 3 and 5?
Pattern: _ _ c _ c _ _ → fill: b, i, y, l, e → so answer: bicycle

2. Horse → 5 letters: h-o-r-s-e
Given: h and s
Pattern: h _ _ s _ → fill: o, r, e → so horse

But user wrote "h _ _ s _ _" — that's 6 characters. Maybe typo? Or plural? "horses" is 6 letters: h-o-r-s-e-s
Given h and s, pattern h _ _ s _ _ → fill o,r,e,s → horses

Picture is one horse, but sometimes worksheets use plural. Let's check other items.

3. Water drops → likely "water" or "drop"? But three drops, probably "water"
"water" is 5 letters: w-a-t-e-r
Given: t and r
Pattern: _ _ t _ r → fill w,a,e → water

User wrote "_ _ t _ r" — yes, 5 positions. Good.

So for horse, if it's "horses", 6 letters: h-o-r-s-e-s
Given h and s, pattern h _ _ s _ _ → positions: 1:h, 2:o, 3:r, 4:s, 5:e, 6:s → but s is already given at position 4, so fill o,r,e,s → but that's four fills for four blanks? Wait, blanks are at 2,3,5,6 → fill o,r,e,s → word: h-o-r-s-e-s → "horses"

Okay, acceptable.

---

Row 2:

4. House → h-o-u-s-e → 5 letters
Given: o and s
Pattern: _ o _ s _ → fill h,u,e → house

5. Tiger → t-i-g-e-r → 5 letters
Given: t and g
Pattern: t _ g _ _ → fill i,e,r → tiger

6. Sheep → s-h-e-e-p → 5 letters
Given: s and e
Pattern: s _ _ e _ → fill h,e,p → sheep

---

Row 3:

7. Child dancing → probably "happy" or "dance"? But looks like a child jumping joyfully.
Given: h and l
Pattern: _ h _ l _ → what word? "child" is c-h-i-l-d → 5 letters
Given h and l at positions 2 and 4?
Pattern: _ h _ l _ → fill c,i,d → child

Yes, makes sense.

8. Tooth → t-o-o-t-h → 5 letters
Given: t and h
Pattern: t _ _ _ h → fill o,o,t → tooth

9. Mango → m-a-n-g-o → 5 letters
Given: n and o
Pattern: _ _ n _ o → fill m,a,g → mango

Perfect.

Now, let's write the completed words for each:

1. Bicycle → bicycle
2. Horse(s) → since pattern suggests 6 letters, horses
3. Water → water
4. House → house
5. Tiger → tiger
6. Sheep → sheep
7. Child → child
8. Tooth → tooth
9. Mango → mango

But for #2, is it "horse" or "horses"? Picture shows one horse, but the blank pattern has 6 characters: h _ _ s _ _ → which fits "horses" better. In many worksheets, they might use plural even for single image for simplicity. We'll go with "horses" to fit the blanks.

Alternatively, if it's "horse", it should be h _ _ s _ → 5 characters, but user wrote "h _ _ s _ _" — so likely "horses".

Similarly, all others fit perfectly.

Final answers per item:

- Bicycle: b i c y c l e → but since c and c are given, fill the blanks: first blank b, second i, fourth y, fifth l, sixth e? Wait no.

Let's map exactly as per blanks given in user input:

User wrote for each:

1. c _ c _ _ _ → but this must be incomplete; probably it's _ _ c _ c _ _ for 7 letters.

To avoid confusion, I'll provide the full word for each picture, as that's what the task asks: "Fill in the blanks below each picture" to form the word.

So the final answer is the completed word for each image.

Thus:

1. bicycle
2. horses (to fit 6-letter pattern)
3. water
4. house
5. tiger
6. sheep
7. child
8. tooth
9. mango

But let's double-check #2: if the picture is one horse, and word is "horse", then pattern should be h _ _ s _ → 5 letters. But user input says "h _ _ s _ _" — 6 characters. Perhaps it's a mistake, or perhaps it's "horsey" or something, but unlikely.

Another possibility: "stallion"? Too long.

I think "horses" is acceptable for the worksheet context.

Perhaps the red 's' is for the fourth letter, and last blank is for 'e', but then it's still 5 letters. I'm overcomplicating.

Let me look for consistency.

In row 3, #7: child — pattern _ h _ l _ → 5 letters, perfect.

#8: tooth — t _ _ _ h → 5 letters.

#9: mango — _ _ n _ o → 5 letters.

Row 2: all 5 letters except possibly #2.

Row 1: #1 bicycle 7 letters, #2 ? , #3 water 5 letters.

For #1, if pattern is c _ c _ _ _, that's 6 characters, but "bicycle" is 7. Unless it's "cycle" — c-y-c-l-e → 5 letters, not matching.

Perhaps the first 'c' is not the first letter. I think the safest way is to ignore the exact blank count in text and go by the image meaning.

Since this is a common type of worksheet, the words are:

- Bike picture: bicycle
- Horse picture: horse
- Drops: water
- House: house
- Tiger: tiger
- Sheep: sheep
- Dancing kid: child
- Tooth: tooth
- Fruit: mango

And the blanks are to be filled accordingly, with given letters as hints.

For "horse", if given h and s, and pattern h _ _ s _, fill o,r,e.

In user input, they wrote "h _ _ s _ _" — perhaps a typo, and it should be "h _ _ s _".

Similarly for bicycle, likely "_ _ c _ c _ _".

I think for the purpose of this task, we'll provide the correct word for each picture.

So final answer list:

1. bicycle
2. horse
3. water
4. house
5. tiger
6. sheep
7. child
8. tooth
9. mango

And for the blanks, fill in the missing letters based on these words.

But since the question is to "fill in the blanks", and we need to output the completed words, I'll go with that.

To match the format, perhaps list the words in order.

Final Answer:
bicycle, horse, water, house, tiger, sheep, child, tooth, mango
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of letter 5 worksheet.
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