I Have A Pet Worksheet - Color, Cut, & Paste - Super Simple - Free Printable
Educational worksheet: I Have A Pet Worksheet - Color, Cut, & Paste - Super Simple. Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: I Have A Pet Worksheet - Color, Cut, & Paste - Super Simple
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: I Have A Pet Worksheet - Color, Cut, & Paste - Super Simple
Explanation:
This is a matching activity where you need to pair each animal picture with its correct name.
Let’s go step by step:
1. Look at the top-left animal drawing — it’s a lion (big cat with a mane). The word “lion” is already written under it, and the silhouette matches.
2. Next, find the cat: It’s a small domestic cat with pointy ears and a tail. On the right side, the second animal (from top) is labeled “cat”, and its drawing matches the silhouette in the middle row, left column.
3. Bird: A small bird with wings and a beak. The third animal on the right is labeled “bird”, and its silhouette is in the middle row, middle column.
4. Dog: A dog with floppy ears and a tail. The fourth animal on the right is labeled “dog”, and its silhouette is in the bottom row, left column.
5. Fish: A fish with fins and a tail. The fifth animal on the right is labeled “fish”, and its silhouette is in the bottom row, right column.
Now check the grid of silhouettes:
- Top row: left = lion (already labeled), middle = blank, right = blank
But actually, looking carefully:
The grid has 6 cells (2 rows × 3 columns? Wait — no, it's 3 rows × 2 columns? Let me re-express clearly based on standard layout of such worksheets:
From the image description (standard for this type of worksheet):
- Left column (top to bottom): lion (drawn + labeled), then blank, then blank
- Right column (top to bottom): blank, blank, blank
But the silhouettes shown are 5 gray shapes:
1. Lion (top-left, already matched)
2. A bird-shaped silhouette (middle-left)
3. A fish-shaped silhouette (middle-right)
4. A dog-shaped silhouette (bottom-left)
5. A cat-shaped silhouette (bottom-right)
And on the right side, the list is:
- mouse
- cat
- bird
- dog
- fish
So we match:
- lion → lion (given)
- cat drawing → “cat”
- bird drawing → “bird”
- dog drawing → “dog”
- fish drawing → “fish”
The “mouse” is the only one *not* used — there is no mouse silhouette in the grid.
Therefore, the correct matching is:
- lion ↔ lion
- cat ↔ cat
- bird ↔ bird
- dog ↔ dog
- fish ↔ fish
Since the task likely asks to write the names next to the silhouettes or select correct labels, and all five animals (except mouse) appear as silhouettes, the answer is that each silhouette corresponds to its labeled name on the right — excluding “mouse”.
But the question implied in the header “My name is ___” suggests the student is to fill in their name — however, that’s just a placeholder. The real task is matching.
Given standard version of this worksheet (“I Have A Pet” cut-and-paste), the expected output is to associate each silhouette with the correct word. Since the user hasn’t asked a specific question like “Which one is missing?”, but the format implies completing the matching, and only one option is unused, the key point is:
The unused word is mouse, because there is no mouse silhouette.
But wait — let’s double-check: Are there exactly 5 silhouettes and 5 words? Yes: lion, cat, bird, dog, fish — that’s 5. And the word list has 5: mouse, cat, bird, dog, fish. So lion is shown as a line drawing (not silhouette), and there are 5 silhouettes: lion (but it’s already drawn, maybe not counted as silhouette?), actually the gray shapes are 5: lion, bird, fish, dog, cat — yes, 5 silhouettes, and 5 labels on right — but “mouse” is extra? No, the right list has 5 items: mouse, cat, bird, dog, fish — that’s 5. And left has 5 silhouettes: lion, ?, ?, ?, ? — but lion is both drawn and silhouette? In typical versions, the lion is the example, and the other 4 silhouettes are to be matched to 4 of the 5 words — meaning one word is extra.
Yes — standard design: 1 example (lion), 4 blanks to match with 5 word choices → one distractor.
So silhouettes to match (gray shapes, excluding the labeled lion drawing):
- Shape 1: cat
- Shape 2: bird
- Shape 3: dog
- Shape 4: fish
Words available: mouse, cat, bird, dog, fish
→ So “mouse” is the extra word that does *not* match any silhouette.
Thus, if the task is “Which word does NOT have a matching picture?”, the answer is mouse.
Given the context and common version of this worksheet, that is the intended question.
Final Answer:
mouse
This is a matching activity where you need to pair each animal picture with its correct name.
Let’s go step by step:
1. Look at the top-left animal drawing — it’s a lion (big cat with a mane). The word “lion” is already written under it, and the silhouette matches.
2. Next, find the cat: It’s a small domestic cat with pointy ears and a tail. On the right side, the second animal (from top) is labeled “cat”, and its drawing matches the silhouette in the middle row, left column.
3. Bird: A small bird with wings and a beak. The third animal on the right is labeled “bird”, and its silhouette is in the middle row, middle column.
4. Dog: A dog with floppy ears and a tail. The fourth animal on the right is labeled “dog”, and its silhouette is in the bottom row, left column.
5. Fish: A fish with fins and a tail. The fifth animal on the right is labeled “fish”, and its silhouette is in the bottom row, right column.
Now check the grid of silhouettes:
- Top row: left = lion (already labeled), middle = blank, right = blank
But actually, looking carefully:
The grid has 6 cells (2 rows × 3 columns? Wait — no, it's 3 rows × 2 columns? Let me re-express clearly based on standard layout of such worksheets:
From the image description (standard for this type of worksheet):
- Left column (top to bottom): lion (drawn + labeled), then blank, then blank
- Right column (top to bottom): blank, blank, blank
But the silhouettes shown are 5 gray shapes:
1. Lion (top-left, already matched)
2. A bird-shaped silhouette (middle-left)
3. A fish-shaped silhouette (middle-right)
4. A dog-shaped silhouette (bottom-left)
5. A cat-shaped silhouette (bottom-right)
And on the right side, the list is:
- mouse
- cat
- bird
- dog
- fish
So we match:
- lion → lion (given)
- cat drawing → “cat”
- bird drawing → “bird”
- dog drawing → “dog”
- fish drawing → “fish”
The “mouse” is the only one *not* used — there is no mouse silhouette in the grid.
Therefore, the correct matching is:
- lion ↔ lion
- cat ↔ cat
- bird ↔ bird
- dog ↔ dog
- fish ↔ fish
Since the task likely asks to write the names next to the silhouettes or select correct labels, and all five animals (except mouse) appear as silhouettes, the answer is that each silhouette corresponds to its labeled name on the right — excluding “mouse”.
But the question implied in the header “My name is ___” suggests the student is to fill in their name — however, that’s just a placeholder. The real task is matching.
Given standard version of this worksheet (“I Have A Pet” cut-and-paste), the expected output is to associate each silhouette with the correct word. Since the user hasn’t asked a specific question like “Which one is missing?”, but the format implies completing the matching, and only one option is unused, the key point is:
The unused word is mouse, because there is no mouse silhouette.
But wait — let’s double-check: Are there exactly 5 silhouettes and 5 words? Yes: lion, cat, bird, dog, fish — that’s 5. And the word list has 5: mouse, cat, bird, dog, fish. So lion is shown as a line drawing (not silhouette), and there are 5 silhouettes: lion (but it’s already drawn, maybe not counted as silhouette?), actually the gray shapes are 5: lion, bird, fish, dog, cat — yes, 5 silhouettes, and 5 labels on right — but “mouse” is extra? No, the right list has 5 items: mouse, cat, bird, dog, fish — that’s 5. And left has 5 silhouettes: lion, ?, ?, ?, ? — but lion is both drawn and silhouette? In typical versions, the lion is the example, and the other 4 silhouettes are to be matched to 4 of the 5 words — meaning one word is extra.
Yes — standard design: 1 example (lion), 4 blanks to match with 5 word choices → one distractor.
So silhouettes to match (gray shapes, excluding the labeled lion drawing):
- Shape 1: cat
- Shape 2: bird
- Shape 3: dog
- Shape 4: fish
Words available: mouse, cat, bird, dog, fish
→ So “mouse” is the extra word that does *not* match any silhouette.
Thus, if the task is “Which word does NOT have a matching picture?”, the answer is mouse.
Given the context and common version of this worksheet, that is the intended question.
Final Answer:
mouse
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of printable worksheet pets.