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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Writing Worksheets for Creative Kids | Free PDF Printables ...
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Writing Worksheets for Creative Kids | Free PDF Printables ...
Let’s solve the riddles one by one. Each riddle gives clues about an animal or object, and we need to figure out what it is — then draw it (but since we’re writing here, we’ll just name it).
---
Riddle 1:
> You use me at night, in the morning too
> I help you eat your food, and drink your brew
> What am I? Draw me!
Think: What do you use every day to eat and drink? It’s something you hold in your hand. At night and in the morning — maybe for breakfast or dinner.
It’s a spoon! Or maybe a fork? But “drink your brew” suggests spoon (for soup or stirring tea). Actually, could be a cup? Wait — “help you eat your food” — cups don’t help you eat, they help you drink.
Wait — maybe it’s a plate? No, plates don’t help you drink.
Actually… think again: “You use me at night, in the morning too” — that’s any time you eat. “I help you eat your food, and drink your brew” — so it helps with both eating AND drinking.
That sounds like a spoon — you can eat soup with it, stir tea/coffee with it.
But let’s check the rhyme clue from the top: “fill in the blank with a word that rhymes.” The first line says: “Sherlock Bones has a puzzle for you. Read the clues. Figure out the puzzle, and fill in the blank with a word that rhymes.”
Looking at Riddle 1:
“I help you eat your food, and ___ your brew” — wait, the original text says: “I help you eat your food, and [blank] your brew”? Actually, looking back:
Original text:
“You use me at night, in the m______
I help you eat your food, and ______ your brew
What am I? Draw me!”
Hmm — actually, in the image, it’s cut off. But based on common riddles, this is likely:
“You use me at night, in the morning too
I help you eat your food, and drink your brew”
So no blank to fill — just solve the riddle.
Answer: Spoon
But let’s move to next ones — maybe pattern will help.
---
Riddle 2:
> I like to purr, I chase mice, and I am fat
> I am a fluffy, orange ______
> What am I? Draw me!
Clues: purrs, chases mice, fluffy, orange → definitely a cat!
And it says “I am a fluffy, orange ___” — probably “cat” fits. Also, “fat” — cats can be fat.
Rhyme? “fat” and “cat” rhyme! Perfect.
So answer: cat
---
Riddle 3:
> I live in the barnyard, but then I got lost
> I honked and honked. I am a ______
> What am I? Draw me!
Barnyard animal that honks → goose!
Geese honk. They live in barnyards sometimes. Got lost — makes sense.
“lost” and “goose” — do they rhyme? Not really. Wait — maybe “duck”? Ducks quack, not honk. Geese honk.
Perhaps the blank is “goose”, and the rhyme is with “lost”? Doesn’t rhyme.
Wait — maybe the sentence is: “I honked and honked. I am a ___” — perhaps the blank is meant to rhyme with “lost”? Like “ghost”? But ghost doesn’t live in barnyard or honk.
Another thought: Maybe it’s “hen”? Hens cluck. Roosters crow.
Only goose honks.
Perhaps the rhyme is not required for all — only the first instruction said “fill in the blank with a word that rhymes” — maybe only for the first riddle? Let’s re-read the top:
“Sherlock Bones has a puzzle for you. Read the clues. Figure out the puzzle, and fill in the blank with a word that rhymes. Then draw your ans”
It says “the puzzle” — singular — maybe only one blank to fill with a rhyming word? But there are blanks in each riddle.
In Riddle 2: “I am a fluffy, orange ___” — we put “cat” which rhymes with “fat”.
In Riddle 3: “I am a ___” — if we put “goose”, does it rhyme with “lost”? No.
Unless... “I honked and honked. I am a ___” — maybe the blank is “noise”? But noise isn’t an animal.
Wait — perhaps it’s “gosling”? Still doesn’t rhyme.
Another idea: Maybe it’s “duck” — but ducks don’t honk.
Actually, geese honk. And “goose” might be intended even if it doesn’t perfectly rhyme — or perhaps the rhyme is with “barnyard”? No.
Let’s look at the structure:
Each riddle ends with “What am I? Draw me!” — so we just need to identify the thing.
For Riddle 3: Barnyard + honks = goose
We’ll go with that.
---
Now, back to Riddle 1: Let’s confirm.
“You use me at night, in the morning too
I help you eat your food, and drink your brew”
Common answer: spoon
But “spoon” doesn’t rhyme with anything obvious. Unless the blank is in “in the m___” — maybe “morning” is cut off, and it’s “in the moon”? That would be weird.
Wait — the very first line: “Sherlock Bones has a puzzle for you. Read the clues. Figure out the puzzle, and fill in the blank with a word that rhymes.”
Then below: “You use me at night, in the m______” — ah! There’s a blank after “m” — probably “morning” is written as “mornin’” or something, but in the image it’s cut off.
Assuming it’s “in the morning”, no blank.
But perhaps the blank is in “and ___ your brew” — like “sip” or “drink”.
But “drink” is already there in some versions.
I think for school level, Riddle 1 is spoon, Riddle 2 is cat, Riddle 3 is goose.
But let’s double-check Riddle 1 with rhyme.
Suppose the line is: “You use me at night, in the ___” — blank after “the”, and it should rhyme with something.
The next line: “I help you eat your food, and ___ your brew” — two blanks?
This is messy. Perhaps the “puzzle” refers to the whole sheet, and we need to find words that rhyme within each riddle.
In Riddle 2: “fat” and “cat” rhyme — good.
In Riddle 3: “lost” and ? — if we say “I am a ghost” — but ghost doesn’t fit.
Another possibility for Riddle 3: “I live in the barnyard, but then I got lost / I honked and honked. I am a ___” — perhaps “host”? No.
Maybe it’s “cow” — cows moo, not honk.
I think we have to accept that Riddle 3 is goose, and the rhyme might not be perfect, or perhaps it’s not required for all.
Perhaps the blank is “one” — “I am a one” — doesn’t make sense.
Let’s search for common riddles.
Upon second thought, a common riddle is:
"I live in the barnyard, I honk when I'm cross,
I’m white and I’m feathery, I’m covered in moss?" No.
Actually, standard answer for "honks in barnyard" is goose.
So I’ll go with:
Riddle 1: Spoon
Riddle 2: Cat
Riddle 3: Goose
But for Riddle 1, let’s see if there’s a better fit.
Another idea: “You use me at night, in the morning too” — could be a toothbrush? But toothbrush doesn’t help you eat or drink.
Or fork — same as spoon.
Perhaps knife — but doesn’t help drink.
I think spoon is best.
Maybe cup — you drink from cup, but eat? Not really.
Unless it’s a bowl — you eat from bowl, drink soup from bowl.
“Bowl” — does it rhyme with anything? In the riddle, “brew” — bowl and brew don’t rhyme.
“Spoon” and “moon”? No.
Perhaps the rhyme is between lines.
Line 1: “too”
Line 2: “brew” — too and brew rhyme! Oh!
“You use me at night, in the morning too” — ends with “too”
“I help you eat your food, and drink your brew” — ends with “brew” — “too” and “brew” rhyme! Yes!
So no blank to fill for rhyme — the rhyme is between the last words of the two lines.
Similarly, Riddle 2: “fat” and “cat” — rhyme.
Riddle 3: “lost” and ? — “I am a ___” — if we put “ghost”, it rhymes with “lost”, but ghost doesn’t honk or live in barnyard.
Unless it’s a joke — but unlikely.
Perhaps “I am a duck” — duck and lost? No.
Another thought: “I honked and honked. I am a ___” — perhaps “sound”? But not an animal.
I think for Riddle 3, it’s still goose, and the rhyme might be overlooked, or perhaps the blank is not for rhyme in this case.
Maybe the word is “gosling” — still no rhyme.
Let’s assume the answers are:
1. Spoon
2. Cat
3. Goose
And for drawing, the student would draw them.
Now, the persuasive writing part is separate — it’s not a problem to solve, but a writing prompt. Since the user asked to solve the problem, and the problems are the riddles, we focus on those.
So final answers for the riddles:
- First riddle: spoon
- Second riddle: cat
- Third riddle: goose
But to be precise, let's write them as per the blanks.
In Riddle 2: “I am a fluffy, orange ___” → cat
In Riddle 3: “I am a ___” → goose
In Riddle 1, no explicit blank, but the answer is spoon.
Since the instruction says “fill in the blank with a word that rhymes”, and in Riddle 2, “cat” rhymes with “fat”, that works.
For Riddle 3, if we must have a rhyme, perhaps it’s “I am a host” — but doesn’t fit.
Another idea: “I live in the barnyard, but then I got lost / I honked and honked. I am a ___” — perhaps “boast”? No.
I recall a riddle: “I live in the barn, I honk when I’m mad, I’m yellow and fuzzy, I’m not very bad” — chick? But chicks don’t honk.
Goose is correct.
Perhaps the word is “one” — “I am a one” — nonsense.
I think we have to go with goose.
So for the student, the answers are:
1. Spoon
2. Cat
3. Goose
And they should draw each.
Final Answer:
For the riddles:
- The first answer is spoon.
- The second answer is cat.
- The third answer is goose.
---
Riddle 1:
> You use me at night, in the morning too
> I help you eat your food, and drink your brew
> What am I? Draw me!
Think: What do you use every day to eat and drink? It’s something you hold in your hand. At night and in the morning — maybe for breakfast or dinner.
It’s a spoon! Or maybe a fork? But “drink your brew” suggests spoon (for soup or stirring tea). Actually, could be a cup? Wait — “help you eat your food” — cups don’t help you eat, they help you drink.
Wait — maybe it’s a plate? No, plates don’t help you drink.
Actually… think again: “You use me at night, in the morning too” — that’s any time you eat. “I help you eat your food, and drink your brew” — so it helps with both eating AND drinking.
That sounds like a spoon — you can eat soup with it, stir tea/coffee with it.
But let’s check the rhyme clue from the top: “fill in the blank with a word that rhymes.” The first line says: “Sherlock Bones has a puzzle for you. Read the clues. Figure out the puzzle, and fill in the blank with a word that rhymes.”
Looking at Riddle 1:
“I help you eat your food, and ___ your brew” — wait, the original text says: “I help you eat your food, and [blank] your brew”? Actually, looking back:
Original text:
“You use me at night, in the m______
I help you eat your food, and ______ your brew
What am I? Draw me!”
Hmm — actually, in the image, it’s cut off. But based on common riddles, this is likely:
“You use me at night, in the morning too
I help you eat your food, and drink your brew”
So no blank to fill — just solve the riddle.
Answer: Spoon
But let’s move to next ones — maybe pattern will help.
---
Riddle 2:
> I like to purr, I chase mice, and I am fat
> I am a fluffy, orange ______
> What am I? Draw me!
Clues: purrs, chases mice, fluffy, orange → definitely a cat!
And it says “I am a fluffy, orange ___” — probably “cat” fits. Also, “fat” — cats can be fat.
Rhyme? “fat” and “cat” rhyme! Perfect.
So answer: cat
---
Riddle 3:
> I live in the barnyard, but then I got lost
> I honked and honked. I am a ______
> What am I? Draw me!
Barnyard animal that honks → goose!
Geese honk. They live in barnyards sometimes. Got lost — makes sense.
“lost” and “goose” — do they rhyme? Not really. Wait — maybe “duck”? Ducks quack, not honk. Geese honk.
Perhaps the blank is “goose”, and the rhyme is with “lost”? Doesn’t rhyme.
Wait — maybe the sentence is: “I honked and honked. I am a ___” — perhaps the blank is meant to rhyme with “lost”? Like “ghost”? But ghost doesn’t live in barnyard or honk.
Another thought: Maybe it’s “hen”? Hens cluck. Roosters crow.
Only goose honks.
Perhaps the rhyme is not required for all — only the first instruction said “fill in the blank with a word that rhymes” — maybe only for the first riddle? Let’s re-read the top:
“Sherlock Bones has a puzzle for you. Read the clues. Figure out the puzzle, and fill in the blank with a word that rhymes. Then draw your ans”
It says “the puzzle” — singular — maybe only one blank to fill with a rhyming word? But there are blanks in each riddle.
In Riddle 2: “I am a fluffy, orange ___” — we put “cat” which rhymes with “fat”.
In Riddle 3: “I am a ___” — if we put “goose”, does it rhyme with “lost”? No.
Unless... “I honked and honked. I am a ___” — maybe the blank is “noise”? But noise isn’t an animal.
Wait — perhaps it’s “gosling”? Still doesn’t rhyme.
Another idea: Maybe it’s “duck” — but ducks don’t honk.
Actually, geese honk. And “goose” might be intended even if it doesn’t perfectly rhyme — or perhaps the rhyme is with “barnyard”? No.
Let’s look at the structure:
Each riddle ends with “What am I? Draw me!” — so we just need to identify the thing.
For Riddle 3: Barnyard + honks = goose
We’ll go with that.
---
Now, back to Riddle 1: Let’s confirm.
“You use me at night, in the morning too
I help you eat your food, and drink your brew”
Common answer: spoon
But “spoon” doesn’t rhyme with anything obvious. Unless the blank is in “in the m___” — maybe “morning” is cut off, and it’s “in the moon”? That would be weird.
Wait — the very first line: “Sherlock Bones has a puzzle for you. Read the clues. Figure out the puzzle, and fill in the blank with a word that rhymes.”
Then below: “You use me at night, in the m______” — ah! There’s a blank after “m” — probably “morning” is written as “mornin’” or something, but in the image it’s cut off.
Assuming it’s “in the morning”, no blank.
But perhaps the blank is in “and ___ your brew” — like “sip” or “drink”.
But “drink” is already there in some versions.
I think for school level, Riddle 1 is spoon, Riddle 2 is cat, Riddle 3 is goose.
But let’s double-check Riddle 1 with rhyme.
Suppose the line is: “You use me at night, in the ___” — blank after “the”, and it should rhyme with something.
The next line: “I help you eat your food, and ___ your brew” — two blanks?
This is messy. Perhaps the “puzzle” refers to the whole sheet, and we need to find words that rhyme within each riddle.
In Riddle 2: “fat” and “cat” rhyme — good.
In Riddle 3: “lost” and ? — if we say “I am a ghost” — but ghost doesn’t fit.
Another possibility for Riddle 3: “I live in the barnyard, but then I got lost / I honked and honked. I am a ___” — perhaps “host”? No.
Maybe it’s “cow” — cows moo, not honk.
I think we have to accept that Riddle 3 is goose, and the rhyme might not be perfect, or perhaps it’s not required for all.
Perhaps the blank is “one” — “I am a one” — doesn’t make sense.
Let’s search for common riddles.
Upon second thought, a common riddle is:
"I live in the barnyard, I honk when I'm cross,
I’m white and I’m feathery, I’m covered in moss?" No.
Actually, standard answer for "honks in barnyard" is goose.
So I’ll go with:
Riddle 1: Spoon
Riddle 2: Cat
Riddle 3: Goose
But for Riddle 1, let’s see if there’s a better fit.
Another idea: “You use me at night, in the morning too” — could be a toothbrush? But toothbrush doesn’t help you eat or drink.
Or fork — same as spoon.
Perhaps knife — but doesn’t help drink.
I think spoon is best.
Maybe cup — you drink from cup, but eat? Not really.
Unless it’s a bowl — you eat from bowl, drink soup from bowl.
“Bowl” — does it rhyme with anything? In the riddle, “brew” — bowl and brew don’t rhyme.
“Spoon” and “moon”? No.
Perhaps the rhyme is between lines.
Line 1: “too”
Line 2: “brew” — too and brew rhyme! Oh!
“You use me at night, in the morning too” — ends with “too”
“I help you eat your food, and drink your brew” — ends with “brew” — “too” and “brew” rhyme! Yes!
So no blank to fill for rhyme — the rhyme is between the last words of the two lines.
Similarly, Riddle 2: “fat” and “cat” — rhyme.
Riddle 3: “lost” and ? — “I am a ___” — if we put “ghost”, it rhymes with “lost”, but ghost doesn’t honk or live in barnyard.
Unless it’s a joke — but unlikely.
Perhaps “I am a duck” — duck and lost? No.
Another thought: “I honked and honked. I am a ___” — perhaps “sound”? But not an animal.
I think for Riddle 3, it’s still goose, and the rhyme might be overlooked, or perhaps the blank is not for rhyme in this case.
Maybe the word is “gosling” — still no rhyme.
Let’s assume the answers are:
1. Spoon
2. Cat
3. Goose
And for drawing, the student would draw them.
Now, the persuasive writing part is separate — it’s not a problem to solve, but a writing prompt. Since the user asked to solve the problem, and the problems are the riddles, we focus on those.
So final answers for the riddles:
- First riddle: spoon
- Second riddle: cat
- Third riddle: goose
But to be precise, let's write them as per the blanks.
In Riddle 2: “I am a fluffy, orange ___” → cat
In Riddle 3: “I am a ___” → goose
In Riddle 1, no explicit blank, but the answer is spoon.
Since the instruction says “fill in the blank with a word that rhymes”, and in Riddle 2, “cat” rhymes with “fat”, that works.
For Riddle 3, if we must have a rhyme, perhaps it’s “I am a host” — but doesn’t fit.
Another idea: “I live in the barnyard, but then I got lost / I honked and honked. I am a ___” — perhaps “boast”? No.
I recall a riddle: “I live in the barn, I honk when I’m mad, I’m yellow and fuzzy, I’m not very bad” — chick? But chicks don’t honk.
Goose is correct.
Perhaps the word is “one” — “I am a one” — nonsense.
I think we have to go with goose.
So for the student, the answers are:
1. Spoon
2. Cat
3. Goose
And they should draw each.
Final Answer:
For the riddles:
- The first answer is spoon.
- The second answer is cat.
- The third answer is goose.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of second grade creative writing worksheet.