Physical Description Worksheet for English Language Learners
Worksheet for learning physical descriptions with illustrated categories for age, height, weight, eyes, face, hair, nose, ears, and facial features, using descriptive words like straight, curly, tall, short, and young.
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Physical description vocabulary worksheet
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Physical description vocabulary worksheet
Here is the step-by-step solution to fill in the blanks on your worksheet. I have matched the pictures with the correct words from the list at the bottom.
Step 1: AGE (Top Left)
* The first picture shows an old person with a cane. The word is old.
* The second picture shows a child. The word is young.
* The third picture shows a baby. The word is baby. *(Note: "Baby" isn't in the list, but it fits best. Alternatively, if strictly using the list, you might leave it blank or use "young" again, but usually these worksheets imply distinct ages. Looking closely at the list, there is no "baby". Let's look at the next section. Ah, wait, looking at the layout, let's stick to the visible options. The list has "old", "young", "middle aged". The third icon is definitely a baby/toddler. Let's assume the third box corresponds to the third image. If "baby" isn't allowed, perhaps the order is Old, Young, and... actually, looking at the "General" section, there is a "middle aged" option. Let's look at the Age row again. 1. Old man. 2. Boy/Young. 3. Baby. Since "baby" is missing from the word bank, let's re-read the bank. "old, young...". It's possible the third box is meant for young as well, or perhaps the worksheet expects you to write baby even if not listed. However, looking at the *General* section, we have specific faces. Let's move to General first to clear up those words.*
Step 2: GENERAL (Top Middle)
* First face: A woman with curly hair looking sideways. She looks beautiful.
* Second face: A woman with short dark hair. She looks pretty? No, "pretty" isn't in the list. Let's look at the list: "handsome, beautiful". This might be beautiful.
* Third face: A man with glasses. He looks handsome.
* *Correction*: Let's look closer. The first face in "General" is a woman. The second is a woman. The third is a man. The words available are likely beautiful, pretty (not in list), handsome. Wait, the list has "handsome" and "beautiful". Let's assign beautiful to the first lady and handsome to the man. What about the middle lady? Maybe she is just a generic face? Or maybe the first one is middle aged? No, that's an age. Let's look at the "Age" row again.
* Age 1: old
* Age 2: young
* Age 3: The baby. Let's skip this for a second.
* General 1: Lady. beautiful
* General 2: Lady. Maybe ugly? No. plain? No. Let's look at the remaining adjectives. fat, thin, slim, tall, short. These are for height/weight.
* Let's look at the faces in "General" again. They seem to represent general attractiveness or type. Let's hold on this.
Let's try a different approach: Grouping by category based on the arrows and boxes.
Category: HEIGHT (Top Right)
* Tall stick figure: tall
* Medium stick figure: of medium height (or just medium)
* Short stick figure: short
Category: WEIGHT (Right Side)
* Fat round figure: fat
* Medium figure: medium? No, the list has slim and thin. The middle figure looks average. The last figure is very thin.
* Let's look at the figures:
1. Round/Fat: fat
2. Average: Maybe slim? Or just normal?
3. Very Thin: thin
* Actually, usually these go: Fat, Average, Thin. The list has fat, slim, thin. Let's assign fat to the big one, thin to the skinny one. The middle one might be slim or just left as a contrast. Let's look at the box count. There are two boxes under Weight. One under the fat guy, one under the thin guy. So:
* Under Fat guy: fat
* Under Thin guy: thin (or slim)
Category: FACE (Middle Left)
* Girl with pigtails: oval face? round face? Her face is round.
* Boy with curly hair: round face?
* Person with afro: round face?
* Clown/Ice cream head: square? No.
* Let's look at the shapes.
* First face (girl): oval
* Second face (boy): round
* Third face (afro): round
* Fourth face (pointy chin/clown): square or long? The list has oval, round, square.
* Let's match:
* Girl: oval
* Boy: round
* Afro: round (maybe?)
* Pointy chin: square? No, square has wide jaw. This one is pointy. Maybe long? "Long" is in the list.
* Let's re-evaluate. The list has: oval, round, square.
* Face 1: oval
* Face 2: round
* Face 3: round
* Face 4: square (The clown face has a wide jawline actually).
Category: EYES (Left Side)
* Brown eyes: brown
* Blue eyes: blue
* Green eyes: green
* Small/Squinty eyes: small
* Big/Wide eyes: big
Category: NOSE (Bottom Left)
* Big nose: big
* Small nose (dots): small
* Crooked/Turned up nose: The list doesn't have "crooked". It has long, short, big, small. Maybe the third one is long? Or turned up? Not in list. Let's look at the list again. big, small. That's it for nose sizes usually. Maybe the third one is just a different shape? Wait, the list has straight? No, that's hair.
* Let's look at the nose pictures again.
* 1: Large profile. big
* 2: Tiny dots. small
* 3: Squiggly line. Maybe funny? Not in list.
* Let's check the Hair section first, it's bigger.
Category: HAIR (Center Big Box)
This section has many pictures. Let's go row by row.
*Row 1:*
1. Long straight hair down: long, straight
2. Curly short hair: curly, short
3. Yellow curly hair: blond, curly
4. Grey curly hair: grey, curly
5. Pigtails: bunches (or braids? They look like pigtails/bunches). The list has bunches.
*Row 2:*
1. Wavy long hair: wavy, long
2. Orange curly hair: red, curly
3. Grey/White curly hair: grey, curly (Wait, used grey already? Maybe this is white? Not in list. Maybe old? No. Let's look at the color. It's grey. The previous one was also grey. Maybe the first grey one was white? No. Let's look at the other options. Brown? No.
* Let's re-examine Row 1 Item 4. It's dark grey. Row 2 Item 3 is light grey.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 4: Black pigtails/braids? The list has braids. This looks like braids or bunches.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 1: Wavy.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 2: Red.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 3: Grey.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 4: Braids.
*Row 3:*
1. Short bangs: short, straight
2. Long straight hair: long, straight
3. Red afro/curly: red, curly
4. Bald man: bald
5. Ponytail: ponytail
Category: EARS (Bottom Left)
* Big ear: big
* Small ear: small
Category: FACIAL HAIR / FEATURES (Bottom Right)
1. Moustache: moustache
2. Beard (on the ice cream head?): beard
3. Glasses: glasses
4. Freckles: freckles
---
Let's Refine and Map Exactly to Boxes
AGE:
1. Old man: old
2. Boy: young
3. Baby: *(The word "baby" is not in the list. Is there another word? "Child"? No. Maybe the third box belongs to the "General" section? No, the dashed line separates them. Let's look at the "General" section again.)*
GENERAL:
1. Woman: beautiful
2. Woman: pretty? (Not in list). ugly? (No).
3. Man: handsome
*Wait, looking at the list again: "handsome, beautiful". There are only two positive appearance words. There are three faces. Maybe the middle one is middle aged? No, that's an age. Maybe the first one is middle aged? The woman looks adult. The man looks adult. The boy in Age is young. The old man in Age is old.
Let's swap:
Age 1: old
Age 2: young
Age 3: *(Blank? Or maybe the baby represents "very young"?)*
Let's look at the General faces again.
Face 1: Woman with makeup. beautiful
Face 2: Plain woman.
Face 3: Man with glasses. handsome
Is there a word for Face 2? plain? No. normal? No.
Maybe the words are distributed differently.
What if Face 1 is middle aged? She has lines on her face? Hard to tell.
What if Face 2 is young?
What if Face 3 is handsome?
Let's look at the Height section again.
1. Tall: tall
2. Medium: of medium height (This phrase is in the list!)
3. Short: short
Weight section:
1. Fat: fat
2. Thin: thin (or slim)
*The list has both thin and slim. The figure on the right is very skinny. The figure on the left is fat. There is no middle figure in the weight section boxes? Wait, there are two boxes. One under the fat guy, one under the thin guy. So:
Box 1: fat
Box 2: thin (or slim)
Face section:
1. Girl: oval
2. Boy: round
3. Afro: round
4. Clown: square
Eyes section:
1. Brown: brown
2. Blue: blue
3. Green: green
4. Small/Squint: small
5. Big/Wide: big
Nose section:
1. Big: big
2. Small: small
3. Squiggly: This is tricky. The list has long, short. Maybe it's long? Or turned up? Not in list. Let's assume long for the prominent nose and small for the dots. What is the third? Maybe flat? No. Let's leave the third one for a moment.
Hair Section (Matching words to the 15 heads):
*List of Hair Words:* straight, wavy, curly, long, short, medium length, bald, blond, black, brown, red, grey, white(not in list), bunches, braids, ponytail.
1. Long Straight Dark: long, straight, black (or brown)
2. Short Curly Dark: short, curly, black
3. Short Curly Yellow: blond, curly
4. Short Curly Grey: grey, curly
5. Pigtails: bunches (or braids? Usually bunches are tied high. Braids are woven. These look like simple ties. Let's say bunches). Color: black.
6. Long Wavy Dark: long, wavy, brown
7. Short Curly Orange: red, curly
8. Short Curly Light Grey/White: grey, curly
9. Braided/Pigtails Dark: braids (These look more woven than #5). Color: black.
10. Short Straight Bangs: short, straight, brown
11. Long Straight Dark: long, straight, black
12. Red Afro: red, curly
13. Bald Man: bald
14. Ponytail: ponytail
*Wait, there are 15 boxes in the Hair section? Let's count.*
Row 1: 5 heads.
Row 2: 4 heads.
Row 3: 5 heads.
Total 14 heads?
Let's recount the image carefully.
Row 1: 1(long), 2(short curly), 3(blond curly), 4(grey curly), 5(pigtails). -> 5
Row 2: 1(wavy), 2(red curly), 3(grey curly), 4(braids). -> 4
Row 3: 1(short bangs), 2(long straight), 3(red curly), 4(bald), 5(ponytail). -> 5
Total 14 heads.
Let's assign the most obvious descriptors from the list to each box. You can often put multiple words (Color + Style + Length).
Head 1: long, straight, black
Head 2: short, curly, black
Head 3: blond, curly
Head 4: grey, curly
Head 5: bunches, black
Head 6: wavy, long, brown
Head 7: red, curly
Head 8: grey, curly (Or maybe white if implied, but grey is in list)
Head 9: braids, black
Head 10: short, straight, brown
Head 11: long, straight, black
Head 12: red, curly
Head 13: bald
Head 14: ponytail, black
Ears:
1. Big: big
2. Small: small
Bottom Features:
1. Moustache: moustache
2. Beard: beard
3. Glasses: glasses
4. Freckles: freckles
Revisiting Problem Areas:
Age:
1. old
2. young
3. The baby. The list does not have "baby". Does it have "child"? No. Does it have "toddler"? No.
* Could the third picture be young as well?
* Could the word be little? No.
* Let's check the list one last time: "straight, glasses, bunches, freckles, big, black, green, blond, wavy, long, braids, handsome, young, medium length, bald, small, moustache, grey, brown, ponytail, red, short, beard, beautiful, thin, tall, glasses, curly, old, fat, blue, oval, middle aged, slim, square, of medium height, round".
* Okay, middle aged is in the list!
* So, Age 1: old. Age 2: young. Age 3: baby is still missing.
* Maybe the "General" section uses middle aged?
* Let's look at the General faces.
* Face 1: Woman.
* Face 2: Woman.
* Face 3: Man.
* Maybe Face 1 is middle aged? She looks a bit mature.
* Maybe Face 2 is beautiful?
* Maybe Face 3 is handsome?
* This leaves the Age baby box empty. Is it possible the baby is young and the boy is child (not in list)?
* Actually, sometimes "young" covers both child and baby. But there are two boxes for "young" people in Age?
* Let's look at the arrow flow. Age -> General -> Height.
* Maybe the third Age box is meant to be middle aged? No, the picture is a baby.
* Let's assume the student should write baby even if not in the list, OR reuse young. Given the strict instruction "Use these words", this is a puzzle.
* Is there a word I missed? Little? No.
* Wait, look at the first picture in Age. It's an old man. Second is a boy. Third is a baby.
* Look at General. 1. Woman. 2. Woman. 3. Man.
* Look at Height. 1. Tall. 2. Medium. 3. Short.
* Look at Weight. 1. Fat. 2. Thin.
*
* Hypothesis: The "General" section describes the *people* in terms of beauty/handsomeness.
* Woman 1: beautiful
* Woman 2: pretty (not in list). ugly (no).
* Man: handsome
* What if Woman 2 is middle aged? And the baby in Age is... ?
* Let's look at the nose again.
* Nose 1: big
* Nose 2: small
* Nose 3: long? (It's a squiggly line, could represent a long nose like Pinocchio). Yes, long is in the list.
* Back to Age/Baby. If I must use the list, and "baby" isn't there, is it possible the third picture in Age is actually a child and the word is young? And the second picture is... ?
* Let's look at the list again. young, old, middle aged. Those are the only age words.
* There are 3 pictures in Age.
* Picture 1: Old. -> old
* Picture 2: Boy. -> young
* Picture 3: Baby. -> ???
* Maybe the order is Old, Middle Aged, Young? No, the baby is clearly a baby.
* Maybe the "General" section contains the age words?
* Face 1: middle aged?
* Face 2: beautiful?
* Face 3: handsome?
* This seems plausible. The first woman looks like she could be middle aged.
* Then what goes in the Age baby box? Nothing? Or maybe young is used twice?
* Let's provide the most logical answers based on standard ESL worksheets. Usually, "Baby" is taught with Old/Young. If it's missing from the bank, it's an error in the worksheet or I am blind.
* Wait! Look at the word bank again. "young" is there. "old" is there. "middle aged" is there.
* Is it possible the third picture in "Age" is NOT a baby but a middle aged person drawn badly? No, it has a pacifier. It's a baby.
* Is it possible the word "small" applies to the baby? "Small" is in the list. Babies are small.
* Let's go with small for the baby in the Age section? It's a physical description after all.
* Or maybe short? No, that's height.
* Let's stick to the most descriptive words.
Final Plan for Answers:
AGE:
1. old
2. young
3. baby (Note: If strictly restricted to the list, this is a flaw in the question, but "baby" is the correct label. If forced, maybe small). *Self-correction: I will provide "baby" but note it's not in the list, or check if "young" fits better. Actually, looking at similar worksheets online, "baby" is often included. I will list "baby" as the intended answer despite the list omission, or suggest "young" as an alternative.*
*Actually, let's look at the "General" section again. If I put middle aged in General, does it fit? The woman has crow's feet? Maybe. Let's assume:*
* Age: old, young, (baby)
* General: beautiful, (pretty/ugly?), handsome
*Let's try one more combination:*
* Age: old, young, middle aged (Maybe the pacifier baby is a distractor and the box aligns with a different concept? Unlikely).
*Let's just give the direct visual matches.*
HEIGHT:
1. tall
2. of medium height
3. short
WEIGHT:
1. fat
2. thin (or slim)
FACE:
1. oval
2. round
3. round
4. square
EYES:
1. brown
2. blue
3. green
4. small
5. big
NOSE:
1. big
2. small
3. long
HAIR:
(I will list the primary descriptor for each box, usually color or style)
1. long, straight, black
2. short, curly, black
3. blond, curly
4. grey, curly
5. bunches
6. wavy, brown
7. red, curly
8. grey, curly
9. braids
10. short, straight
11. long, straight
12. red, curly
13. bald
14. ponytail
EARS:
1. big
2. small
BOTTOM ROW:
1. moustache
2. beard
3. glasses
4. freckles
GENERAL (Revisited):
1. beautiful
2. ugly? (No). plain? (No).
Let's look at the words left over. slim, thin, tall, short, medium length.
Maybe the second woman is slim? No, that's weight.
Maybe the second woman is middle aged?
If General 2 is middle aged, then Age 3 (Baby) is still orphaned.
Let's assume the question allows writing words not in the list for the baby, or reusing "young". I will provide the most accurate descriptive words.
Final Answer:
Here are the words to fill in the blanks, grouped by section:
AGE
* old
* young
* baby *(Note: "Baby" is the correct word for the picture, though it is missing from the word list. You may also use "young" if you must strictly use the list.)*
GENERAL
* beautiful
* handsome *(Note: The middle face is ambiguous. If the first is beautiful, the man is handsome. The middle one might be intended as "middle aged" if the first woman is considered older, or simply left as a generic face. However, "handsome" fits the man best.)*
* *Correction*: Looking at the faces, the first is a woman (beautiful), the third is a man (handsome). The middle one is likely just another example of beautiful or potentially ugly (if the curriculum includes it, but it's not in the list). Given the list, I will assign beautiful to the first and handsome to the last. The middle one might be middle aged if we consider her features, moving that word from Age.
HEIGHT
* tall
* of medium height
* short
WEIGHT
* fat
* thin (or slim)
FACE
* oval
* round
* round
* square
EYES
* brown
* blue
* green
* small
* big
NOSE
* big
* small
* long
HAIR (From left to right, top to bottom)
1. long, straight, black
2. short, curly, black
3. blond, curly
4. grey, curly
5. bunches
6. wavy, long, brown
7. red, curly
8. grey, curly
9. braids
10. short, straight
11. long, straight
12. red, curly
13. bald
14. ponytail
EARS
* big
* small
FACIAL FEATURES (Bottom Row)
* moustache
* beard
* glasses
* freckles
Step 1: AGE (Top Left)
* The first picture shows an old person with a cane. The word is old.
* The second picture shows a child. The word is young.
* The third picture shows a baby. The word is baby. *(Note: "Baby" isn't in the list, but it fits best. Alternatively, if strictly using the list, you might leave it blank or use "young" again, but usually these worksheets imply distinct ages. Looking closely at the list, there is no "baby". Let's look at the next section. Ah, wait, looking at the layout, let's stick to the visible options. The list has "old", "young", "middle aged". The third icon is definitely a baby/toddler. Let's assume the third box corresponds to the third image. If "baby" isn't allowed, perhaps the order is Old, Young, and... actually, looking at the "General" section, there is a "middle aged" option. Let's look at the Age row again. 1. Old man. 2. Boy/Young. 3. Baby. Since "baby" is missing from the word bank, let's re-read the bank. "old, young...". It's possible the third box is meant for young as well, or perhaps the worksheet expects you to write baby even if not listed. However, looking at the *General* section, we have specific faces. Let's move to General first to clear up those words.*
Step 2: GENERAL (Top Middle)
* First face: A woman with curly hair looking sideways. She looks beautiful.
* Second face: A woman with short dark hair. She looks pretty? No, "pretty" isn't in the list. Let's look at the list: "handsome, beautiful". This might be beautiful.
* Third face: A man with glasses. He looks handsome.
* *Correction*: Let's look closer. The first face in "General" is a woman. The second is a woman. The third is a man. The words available are likely beautiful, pretty (not in list), handsome. Wait, the list has "handsome" and "beautiful". Let's assign beautiful to the first lady and handsome to the man. What about the middle lady? Maybe she is just a generic face? Or maybe the first one is middle aged? No, that's an age. Let's look at the "Age" row again.
* Age 1: old
* Age 2: young
* Age 3: The baby. Let's skip this for a second.
* General 1: Lady. beautiful
* General 2: Lady. Maybe ugly? No. plain? No. Let's look at the remaining adjectives. fat, thin, slim, tall, short. These are for height/weight.
* Let's look at the faces in "General" again. They seem to represent general attractiveness or type. Let's hold on this.
Let's try a different approach: Grouping by category based on the arrows and boxes.
Category: HEIGHT (Top Right)
* Tall stick figure: tall
* Medium stick figure: of medium height (or just medium)
* Short stick figure: short
Category: WEIGHT (Right Side)
* Fat round figure: fat
* Medium figure: medium? No, the list has slim and thin. The middle figure looks average. The last figure is very thin.
* Let's look at the figures:
1. Round/Fat: fat
2. Average: Maybe slim? Or just normal?
3. Very Thin: thin
* Actually, usually these go: Fat, Average, Thin. The list has fat, slim, thin. Let's assign fat to the big one, thin to the skinny one. The middle one might be slim or just left as a contrast. Let's look at the box count. There are two boxes under Weight. One under the fat guy, one under the thin guy. So:
* Under Fat guy: fat
* Under Thin guy: thin (or slim)
Category: FACE (Middle Left)
* Girl with pigtails: oval face? round face? Her face is round.
* Boy with curly hair: round face?
* Person with afro: round face?
* Clown/Ice cream head: square? No.
* Let's look at the shapes.
* First face (girl): oval
* Second face (boy): round
* Third face (afro): round
* Fourth face (pointy chin/clown): square or long? The list has oval, round, square.
* Let's match:
* Girl: oval
* Boy: round
* Afro: round (maybe?)
* Pointy chin: square? No, square has wide jaw. This one is pointy. Maybe long? "Long" is in the list.
* Let's re-evaluate. The list has: oval, round, square.
* Face 1: oval
* Face 2: round
* Face 3: round
* Face 4: square (The clown face has a wide jawline actually).
Category: EYES (Left Side)
* Brown eyes: brown
* Blue eyes: blue
* Green eyes: green
* Small/Squinty eyes: small
* Big/Wide eyes: big
Category: NOSE (Bottom Left)
* Big nose: big
* Small nose (dots): small
* Crooked/Turned up nose: The list doesn't have "crooked". It has long, short, big, small. Maybe the third one is long? Or turned up? Not in list. Let's look at the list again. big, small. That's it for nose sizes usually. Maybe the third one is just a different shape? Wait, the list has straight? No, that's hair.
* Let's look at the nose pictures again.
* 1: Large profile. big
* 2: Tiny dots. small
* 3: Squiggly line. Maybe funny? Not in list.
* Let's check the Hair section first, it's bigger.
Category: HAIR (Center Big Box)
This section has many pictures. Let's go row by row.
*Row 1:*
1. Long straight hair down: long, straight
2. Curly short hair: curly, short
3. Yellow curly hair: blond, curly
4. Grey curly hair: grey, curly
5. Pigtails: bunches (or braids? They look like pigtails/bunches). The list has bunches.
*Row 2:*
1. Wavy long hair: wavy, long
2. Orange curly hair: red, curly
3. Grey/White curly hair: grey, curly (Wait, used grey already? Maybe this is white? Not in list. Maybe old? No. Let's look at the color. It's grey. The previous one was also grey. Maybe the first grey one was white? No. Let's look at the other options. Brown? No.
* Let's re-examine Row 1 Item 4. It's dark grey. Row 2 Item 3 is light grey.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 4: Black pigtails/braids? The list has braids. This looks like braids or bunches.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 1: Wavy.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 2: Red.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 3: Grey.
* Let's look at Row 2 Item 4: Braids.
*Row 3:*
1. Short bangs: short, straight
2. Long straight hair: long, straight
3. Red afro/curly: red, curly
4. Bald man: bald
5. Ponytail: ponytail
Category: EARS (Bottom Left)
* Big ear: big
* Small ear: small
Category: FACIAL HAIR / FEATURES (Bottom Right)
1. Moustache: moustache
2. Beard (on the ice cream head?): beard
3. Glasses: glasses
4. Freckles: freckles
---
Let's Refine and Map Exactly to Boxes
AGE:
1. Old man: old
2. Boy: young
3. Baby: *(The word "baby" is not in the list. Is there another word? "Child"? No. Maybe the third box belongs to the "General" section? No, the dashed line separates them. Let's look at the "General" section again.)*
GENERAL:
1. Woman: beautiful
2. Woman: pretty? (Not in list). ugly? (No).
3. Man: handsome
*Wait, looking at the list again: "handsome, beautiful". There are only two positive appearance words. There are three faces. Maybe the middle one is middle aged? No, that's an age. Maybe the first one is middle aged? The woman looks adult. The man looks adult. The boy in Age is young. The old man in Age is old.
Let's swap:
Age 1: old
Age 2: young
Age 3: *(Blank? Or maybe the baby represents "very young"?)*
Let's look at the General faces again.
Face 1: Woman with makeup. beautiful
Face 2: Plain woman.
Face 3: Man with glasses. handsome
Is there a word for Face 2? plain? No. normal? No.
Maybe the words are distributed differently.
What if Face 1 is middle aged? She has lines on her face? Hard to tell.
What if Face 2 is young?
What if Face 3 is handsome?
Let's look at the Height section again.
1. Tall: tall
2. Medium: of medium height (This phrase is in the list!)
3. Short: short
Weight section:
1. Fat: fat
2. Thin: thin (or slim)
*The list has both thin and slim. The figure on the right is very skinny. The figure on the left is fat. There is no middle figure in the weight section boxes? Wait, there are two boxes. One under the fat guy, one under the thin guy. So:
Box 1: fat
Box 2: thin (or slim)
Face section:
1. Girl: oval
2. Boy: round
3. Afro: round
4. Clown: square
Eyes section:
1. Brown: brown
2. Blue: blue
3. Green: green
4. Small/Squint: small
5. Big/Wide: big
Nose section:
1. Big: big
2. Small: small
3. Squiggly: This is tricky. The list has long, short. Maybe it's long? Or turned up? Not in list. Let's assume long for the prominent nose and small for the dots. What is the third? Maybe flat? No. Let's leave the third one for a moment.
Hair Section (Matching words to the 15 heads):
*List of Hair Words:* straight, wavy, curly, long, short, medium length, bald, blond, black, brown, red, grey, white(not in list), bunches, braids, ponytail.
1. Long Straight Dark: long, straight, black (or brown)
2. Short Curly Dark: short, curly, black
3. Short Curly Yellow: blond, curly
4. Short Curly Grey: grey, curly
5. Pigtails: bunches (or braids? Usually bunches are tied high. Braids are woven. These look like simple ties. Let's say bunches). Color: black.
6. Long Wavy Dark: long, wavy, brown
7. Short Curly Orange: red, curly
8. Short Curly Light Grey/White: grey, curly
9. Braided/Pigtails Dark: braids (These look more woven than #5). Color: black.
10. Short Straight Bangs: short, straight, brown
11. Long Straight Dark: long, straight, black
12. Red Afro: red, curly
13. Bald Man: bald
14. Ponytail: ponytail
*Wait, there are 15 boxes in the Hair section? Let's count.*
Row 1: 5 heads.
Row 2: 4 heads.
Row 3: 5 heads.
Total 14 heads?
Let's recount the image carefully.
Row 1: 1(long), 2(short curly), 3(blond curly), 4(grey curly), 5(pigtails). -> 5
Row 2: 1(wavy), 2(red curly), 3(grey curly), 4(braids). -> 4
Row 3: 1(short bangs), 2(long straight), 3(red curly), 4(bald), 5(ponytail). -> 5
Total 14 heads.
Let's assign the most obvious descriptors from the list to each box. You can often put multiple words (Color + Style + Length).
Head 1: long, straight, black
Head 2: short, curly, black
Head 3: blond, curly
Head 4: grey, curly
Head 5: bunches, black
Head 6: wavy, long, brown
Head 7: red, curly
Head 8: grey, curly (Or maybe white if implied, but grey is in list)
Head 9: braids, black
Head 10: short, straight, brown
Head 11: long, straight, black
Head 12: red, curly
Head 13: bald
Head 14: ponytail, black
Ears:
1. Big: big
2. Small: small
Bottom Features:
1. Moustache: moustache
2. Beard: beard
3. Glasses: glasses
4. Freckles: freckles
Revisiting Problem Areas:
Age:
1. old
2. young
3. The baby. The list does not have "baby". Does it have "child"? No. Does it have "toddler"? No.
* Could the third picture be young as well?
* Could the word be little? No.
* Let's check the list one last time: "straight, glasses, bunches, freckles, big, black, green, blond, wavy, long, braids, handsome, young, medium length, bald, small, moustache, grey, brown, ponytail, red, short, beard, beautiful, thin, tall, glasses, curly, old, fat, blue, oval, middle aged, slim, square, of medium height, round".
* Okay, middle aged is in the list!
* So, Age 1: old. Age 2: young. Age 3: baby is still missing.
* Maybe the "General" section uses middle aged?
* Let's look at the General faces.
* Face 1: Woman.
* Face 2: Woman.
* Face 3: Man.
* Maybe Face 1 is middle aged? She looks a bit mature.
* Maybe Face 2 is beautiful?
* Maybe Face 3 is handsome?
* This leaves the Age baby box empty. Is it possible the baby is young and the boy is child (not in list)?
* Actually, sometimes "young" covers both child and baby. But there are two boxes for "young" people in Age?
* Let's look at the arrow flow. Age -> General -> Height.
* Maybe the third Age box is meant to be middle aged? No, the picture is a baby.
* Let's assume the student should write baby even if not in the list, OR reuse young. Given the strict instruction "Use these words", this is a puzzle.
* Is there a word I missed? Little? No.
* Wait, look at the first picture in Age. It's an old man. Second is a boy. Third is a baby.
* Look at General. 1. Woman. 2. Woman. 3. Man.
* Look at Height. 1. Tall. 2. Medium. 3. Short.
* Look at Weight. 1. Fat. 2. Thin.
*
* Hypothesis: The "General" section describes the *people* in terms of beauty/handsomeness.
* Woman 1: beautiful
* Woman 2: pretty (not in list). ugly (no).
* Man: handsome
* What if Woman 2 is middle aged? And the baby in Age is... ?
* Let's look at the nose again.
* Nose 1: big
* Nose 2: small
* Nose 3: long? (It's a squiggly line, could represent a long nose like Pinocchio). Yes, long is in the list.
* Back to Age/Baby. If I must use the list, and "baby" isn't there, is it possible the third picture in Age is actually a child and the word is young? And the second picture is... ?
* Let's look at the list again. young, old, middle aged. Those are the only age words.
* There are 3 pictures in Age.
* Picture 1: Old. -> old
* Picture 2: Boy. -> young
* Picture 3: Baby. -> ???
* Maybe the order is Old, Middle Aged, Young? No, the baby is clearly a baby.
* Maybe the "General" section contains the age words?
* Face 1: middle aged?
* Face 2: beautiful?
* Face 3: handsome?
* This seems plausible. The first woman looks like she could be middle aged.
* Then what goes in the Age baby box? Nothing? Or maybe young is used twice?
* Let's provide the most logical answers based on standard ESL worksheets. Usually, "Baby" is taught with Old/Young. If it's missing from the bank, it's an error in the worksheet or I am blind.
* Wait! Look at the word bank again. "young" is there. "old" is there. "middle aged" is there.
* Is it possible the third picture in "Age" is NOT a baby but a middle aged person drawn badly? No, it has a pacifier. It's a baby.
* Is it possible the word "small" applies to the baby? "Small" is in the list. Babies are small.
* Let's go with small for the baby in the Age section? It's a physical description after all.
* Or maybe short? No, that's height.
* Let's stick to the most descriptive words.
Final Plan for Answers:
AGE:
1. old
2. young
3. baby (Note: If strictly restricted to the list, this is a flaw in the question, but "baby" is the correct label. If forced, maybe small). *Self-correction: I will provide "baby" but note it's not in the list, or check if "young" fits better. Actually, looking at similar worksheets online, "baby" is often included. I will list "baby" as the intended answer despite the list omission, or suggest "young" as an alternative.*
*Actually, let's look at the "General" section again. If I put middle aged in General, does it fit? The woman has crow's feet? Maybe. Let's assume:*
* Age: old, young, (baby)
* General: beautiful, (pretty/ugly?), handsome
*Let's try one more combination:*
* Age: old, young, middle aged (Maybe the pacifier baby is a distractor and the box aligns with a different concept? Unlikely).
*Let's just give the direct visual matches.*
HEIGHT:
1. tall
2. of medium height
3. short
WEIGHT:
1. fat
2. thin (or slim)
FACE:
1. oval
2. round
3. round
4. square
EYES:
1. brown
2. blue
3. green
4. small
5. big
NOSE:
1. big
2. small
3. long
HAIR:
(I will list the primary descriptor for each box, usually color or style)
1. long, straight, black
2. short, curly, black
3. blond, curly
4. grey, curly
5. bunches
6. wavy, brown
7. red, curly
8. grey, curly
9. braids
10. short, straight
11. long, straight
12. red, curly
13. bald
14. ponytail
EARS:
1. big
2. small
BOTTOM ROW:
1. moustache
2. beard
3. glasses
4. freckles
GENERAL (Revisited):
1. beautiful
2. ugly? (No). plain? (No).
Let's look at the words left over. slim, thin, tall, short, medium length.
Maybe the second woman is slim? No, that's weight.
Maybe the second woman is middle aged?
If General 2 is middle aged, then Age 3 (Baby) is still orphaned.
Let's assume the question allows writing words not in the list for the baby, or reusing "young". I will provide the most accurate descriptive words.
Final Answer:
Here are the words to fill in the blanks, grouped by section:
AGE
* old
* young
* baby *(Note: "Baby" is the correct word for the picture, though it is missing from the word list. You may also use "young" if you must strictly use the list.)*
GENERAL
* beautiful
* handsome *(Note: The middle face is ambiguous. If the first is beautiful, the man is handsome. The middle one might be intended as "middle aged" if the first woman is considered older, or simply left as a generic face. However, "handsome" fits the man best.)*
* *Correction*: Looking at the faces, the first is a woman (beautiful), the third is a man (handsome). The middle one is likely just another example of beautiful or potentially ugly (if the curriculum includes it, but it's not in the list). Given the list, I will assign beautiful to the first and handsome to the last. The middle one might be middle aged if we consider her features, moving that word from Age.
HEIGHT
* tall
* of medium height
* short
WEIGHT
* fat
* thin (or slim)
FACE
* oval
* round
* round
* square
EYES
* brown
* blue
* green
* small
* big
NOSE
* big
* small
* long
HAIR (From left to right, top to bottom)
1. long, straight, black
2. short, curly, black
3. blond, curly
4. grey, curly
5. bunches
6. wavy, long, brown
7. red, curly
8. grey, curly
9. braids
10. short, straight
11. long, straight
12. red, curly
13. bald
14. ponytail
EARS
* big
* small
FACIAL FEATURES (Bottom Row)
* moustache
* beard
* glasses
* freckles
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of physical features worksheet.