Fun Easter activities including a maze, word search, and coloring page.
Educational worksheet: Easter Ad Libs Fill in the Blank Games | Woo! Jr. Kids Activities. Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.
JPG
2318×3000
676.7 KB
Free · Personal Use
Quality Assured by Worksheets Library Team
Reviewed for educational accuracy and age-appropriateness
ID: #143565
⭐
Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Easter Ad Libs Fill in the Blank Games | Woo! Jr. Kids Activities
▼
Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Easter Ad Libs Fill in the Blank Games | Woo! Jr. Kids Activities
Let’s solve the riddle:
“What kind of jewellery does the Easter Bunny wear?”
We are given a code with letters and numbers:
First line:
`B Z _ _ _ _ _ _`
with numbers below:
`6 22 23 23 5 25`
Second line:
`_ _ _ _`
with numbers:
`14 5 26 18`
And we have a key that tells us which letter matches each number:
```
A 22 H 3 O 5 V 10
B 1 I 8 P 9 W 13
C 6 J 11 Q 16 X 17
D 18 K 19 R 23 Y 21
E 24 L 26 S 15 Z 4
F 20 M 12 T 25
G 14 N 2 U 7
```
Wait — let’s double-check this key. It looks like each letter is assigned a number, but some numbers repeat? Let’s list them clearly by number to avoid mistakes.
Actually, looking again — it seems the key is meant to be read as:
Each letter has a corresponding number. So if you see “B = 1”, that means wherever you see the number 1, it stands for B.
But in the puzzle, we’re given numbers under blanks, so we need to find which letter corresponds to each number.
Let’s make a reverse lookup table (number → letter):
From the key:
- A = 22 → so 22 = A
- B = 1 → 1 = B
- C = 6 → 6 = C
- D = 18 → 18 = D
- E = 24 → 24 = E
- F = 20 → 20 = F
- G = 14 → 14 = G
- H = 3 → 3 = H
- I = 8 → 8 = I
- J = 11 → 11 = J
- K = 19 → 19 = K
- L = 26 → 26 = L
- M = 12 → 12 = M
- N = 2 → 2 = N
- O = 5 → 5 = O
- P = 9 → 9 = P
- Q = 16 → 16 = Q
- R = 23 → 23 = R
- S = 15 → 15 = S
- T = 25 → 25 = T
- U = 7 → 7 = U
- V = 10 → 10 = V
- W = 13 → 13 = W
- X = 17 → 17 = X
- Y = 21 → 21 = Y
- Z = 4 → 4 = Z
Now let’s decode the first word:
Numbers: 6, 22, 23, 23, 5, 25
Look up each:
- 6 → C
- 22 → A
- 23 → R
- 23 → R
- 5 → O
- 25 → T
So first word: C A R R O T → “CARROT”
That makes sense! The Easter Bunny loves carrots.
Now second part: numbers 14, 5, 26, 18
- 14 → G
- 5 → O
- 26 → L
- 18 → D
So: G O L D → “GOLD”
Putting it together:
The Easter Bunny wears Carrot Gold? That doesn’t sound right.
Wait — maybe it’s two words: “Carrot” and “Gold”? But “carrot gold” isn’t a real thing.
Perhaps we misread the layout.
Looking back at the original:
It says:
> What kind of jewellery does the Easter Bunny wear?
Then:
`B Z _ _ _ _ _ _`
with numbers: `6 22 23 23 5 25`
Wait — there’s also “B Z” written above the first blank? Maybe those are hints or part of the answer?
Actually, looking closely: the “B Z” might be separate — perhaps they are already filled in? But that doesn’t fit.
Alternative idea: maybe the “B Z” are not part of the answer, but just labels? Or maybe it’s a trick.
Wait — let’s reexamine the structure.
The puzzle shows:
```
What kind of jewellery does the Easter Bunny wear?
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __
B Z 6 22 23 23 5 25
__ __ __ __
14 5 26 18
```
Ah! Perhaps the “B Z” are the first two letters of the answer? And then the rest are decoded from numbers?
So total answer would be: B + Z + [decoded from 6,22,23,23,5,25] + [decoded from 14,5,26,18]?
But that would be too long.
Alternatively, maybe “B Z” are red herrings, or perhaps they indicate something else.
Another thought: maybe the “B Z” are actually the start of the phrase, and we only decode the numbered parts.
But “BZ CARROT GOLD” doesn’t make sense.
Wait — what if the “B Z” are not letters to include, but rather indicators that the first word starts with B and ends with Z? No, that doesn’t help.
Let’s try ignoring “B Z” for now and focus on the numbers.
We got:
First set: 6,22,23,23,5,25 → C,A,R,R,O,T → “CARROT”
Second set: 14,5,26,18 → G,O,L,D → “GOLD”
So “Carrot Gold”? Still odd.
But wait — maybe it’s “Carrot” as in the vegetable, and “Gold” as in metal — but jewellery made of carrot? Doesn’t make sense.
Unless... it’s a pun!
What if it’s “Carat Gold”? Like, gold measured in carats?
“Carat” is spelled C-A-R-A-T, not C-A-R-R-O-T.
But we have C-A-R-R-O-T from the numbers.
Unless we made a mistake in decoding.
Check number 23: R = 23 → correct.
Number 5: O = 5 → correct.
Number 25: T = 25 → correct.
So “CARROT” is correct.
But “carrot” vs “carat” — homophones!
In jewellery, gold is measured in carats, not carrots.
So the joke is: the Easter Bunny wears Carrot Gold — meaning “Carat Gold”, playing on the fact that bunnies love carrots.
That must be it!
So the answer is: Carrot Gold — a pun on “Carat Gold”.
But let’s confirm the second word: 14=G, 5=O, 26=L, 18=D → GOLD — yes.
And first word: CARROT.
So the full answer is “Carrot Gold”.
But is that considered jewellery? Well, “gold” is, and “carrot” is the pun.
Perhaps the intended answer is simply “Carrot”, but the second line suggests another word.
Another possibility: maybe the two lines form one phrase: “Carrot Gold” as in golden carrots? But still, the pun is clear.
I think we’ve solved it.
Final Answer: Carrot Gold
“What kind of jewellery does the Easter Bunny wear?”
We are given a code with letters and numbers:
First line:
`B Z _ _ _ _ _ _`
with numbers below:
`6 22 23 23 5 25`
Second line:
`_ _ _ _`
with numbers:
`14 5 26 18`
And we have a key that tells us which letter matches each number:
```
A 22 H 3 O 5 V 10
B 1 I 8 P 9 W 13
C 6 J 11 Q 16 X 17
D 18 K 19 R 23 Y 21
E 24 L 26 S 15 Z 4
F 20 M 12 T 25
G 14 N 2 U 7
```
Wait — let’s double-check this key. It looks like each letter is assigned a number, but some numbers repeat? Let’s list them clearly by number to avoid mistakes.
Actually, looking again — it seems the key is meant to be read as:
Each letter has a corresponding number. So if you see “B = 1”, that means wherever you see the number 1, it stands for B.
But in the puzzle, we’re given numbers under blanks, so we need to find which letter corresponds to each number.
Let’s make a reverse lookup table (number → letter):
From the key:
- A = 22 → so 22 = A
- B = 1 → 1 = B
- C = 6 → 6 = C
- D = 18 → 18 = D
- E = 24 → 24 = E
- F = 20 → 20 = F
- G = 14 → 14 = G
- H = 3 → 3 = H
- I = 8 → 8 = I
- J = 11 → 11 = J
- K = 19 → 19 = K
- L = 26 → 26 = L
- M = 12 → 12 = M
- N = 2 → 2 = N
- O = 5 → 5 = O
- P = 9 → 9 = P
- Q = 16 → 16 = Q
- R = 23 → 23 = R
- S = 15 → 15 = S
- T = 25 → 25 = T
- U = 7 → 7 = U
- V = 10 → 10 = V
- W = 13 → 13 = W
- X = 17 → 17 = X
- Y = 21 → 21 = Y
- Z = 4 → 4 = Z
Now let’s decode the first word:
Numbers: 6, 22, 23, 23, 5, 25
Look up each:
- 6 → C
- 22 → A
- 23 → R
- 23 → R
- 5 → O
- 25 → T
So first word: C A R R O T → “CARROT”
That makes sense! The Easter Bunny loves carrots.
Now second part: numbers 14, 5, 26, 18
- 14 → G
- 5 → O
- 26 → L
- 18 → D
So: G O L D → “GOLD”
Putting it together:
The Easter Bunny wears Carrot Gold? That doesn’t sound right.
Wait — maybe it’s two words: “Carrot” and “Gold”? But “carrot gold” isn’t a real thing.
Perhaps we misread the layout.
Looking back at the original:
It says:
> What kind of jewellery does the Easter Bunny wear?
Then:
`B Z _ _ _ _ _ _`
with numbers: `6 22 23 23 5 25`
Wait — there’s also “B Z” written above the first blank? Maybe those are hints or part of the answer?
Actually, looking closely: the “B Z” might be separate — perhaps they are already filled in? But that doesn’t fit.
Alternative idea: maybe the “B Z” are not part of the answer, but just labels? Or maybe it’s a trick.
Wait — let’s reexamine the structure.
The puzzle shows:
```
What kind of jewellery does the Easter Bunny wear?
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __
B Z 6 22 23 23 5 25
__ __ __ __
14 5 26 18
```
Ah! Perhaps the “B Z” are the first two letters of the answer? And then the rest are decoded from numbers?
So total answer would be: B + Z + [decoded from 6,22,23,23,5,25] + [decoded from 14,5,26,18]?
But that would be too long.
Alternatively, maybe “B Z” are red herrings, or perhaps they indicate something else.
Another thought: maybe the “B Z” are actually the start of the phrase, and we only decode the numbered parts.
But “BZ CARROT GOLD” doesn’t make sense.
Wait — what if the “B Z” are not letters to include, but rather indicators that the first word starts with B and ends with Z? No, that doesn’t help.
Let’s try ignoring “B Z” for now and focus on the numbers.
We got:
First set: 6,22,23,23,5,25 → C,A,R,R,O,T → “CARROT”
Second set: 14,5,26,18 → G,O,L,D → “GOLD”
So “Carrot Gold”? Still odd.
But wait — maybe it’s “Carrot” as in the vegetable, and “Gold” as in metal — but jewellery made of carrot? Doesn’t make sense.
Unless... it’s a pun!
What if it’s “Carat Gold”? Like, gold measured in carats?
“Carat” is spelled C-A-R-A-T, not C-A-R-R-O-T.
But we have C-A-R-R-O-T from the numbers.
Unless we made a mistake in decoding.
Check number 23: R = 23 → correct.
Number 5: O = 5 → correct.
Number 25: T = 25 → correct.
So “CARROT” is correct.
But “carrot” vs “carat” — homophones!
In jewellery, gold is measured in carats, not carrots.
So the joke is: the Easter Bunny wears Carrot Gold — meaning “Carat Gold”, playing on the fact that bunnies love carrots.
That must be it!
So the answer is: Carrot Gold — a pun on “Carat Gold”.
But let’s confirm the second word: 14=G, 5=O, 26=L, 18=D → GOLD — yes.
And first word: CARROT.
So the full answer is “Carrot Gold”.
But is that considered jewellery? Well, “gold” is, and “carrot” is the pun.
Perhaps the intended answer is simply “Carrot”, but the second line suggests another word.
Another possibility: maybe the two lines form one phrase: “Carrot Gold” as in golden carrots? But still, the pun is clear.
I think we’ve solved it.
Final Answer: Carrot Gold
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of printable easter worksheets pdf.