Let’s go through each part of the worksheet step by step. Since this is a listening exercise, we can’t actually hear the audio — but I’ll help you understand how to approach it and what the correct answers would likely be based on common spelling patterns and typical classroom exercises.
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Part I: Listen and circle the letter you hear.
This section tests your ability to recognize individual letters when spoken aloud. In real class, your teacher would say one letter from each pair (like “L” or “O” for #1), and you’d circle the one you heard.
Since we don’t have audio, here’s what you should do in class:
- Pay close attention to the sound.
- Some letters sound similar (like B and D, M and N, S and X).
- Practice saying them out loud to yourself to learn the difference.
Example: If you hear “em”, circle M. If you hear “ess”, circle S.
You’ll need to listen carefully during the actual lesson!
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Part II: Listen and circle the correct spelling of the name.
Again, this depends on hearing the name spoken. But let’s look at the options and think about which ones are most commonly used names:
1.
Amie / Any / Amy → Most common:
Amy
2.
Luck / Luke / Lou → Most common male name:
Luke
3.
Carrie / Carry / Kerry → Common female name:
Carrie (but “Kerry” is also common — depends on pronunciation)
4.
Anthony / Antony / Antoine → Standard English spelling:
Anthony
5.
Genny / Jenny / Yenny → Most common:
Jenny
In class, if the teacher says “AY-mee”, pick Amie. If they say “AY-my”, pick Amy. Always match the sound you hear.
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Part III: Complete the list of names.
You’re given last names and need to fill in first names that go with them. These are very common surnames, so pair them with popular first names.
Here are some natural combinations:
1. Lee →
David Lee,
Jennifer Lee,
Michael Lee
Let’s pick:
David
2. Brown →
James Brown,
Sarah Brown,
Chris Brown
Let’s pick:
James
3. Jones →
Tom Jones,
Mary Jones,
Robert Jones
Let’s pick:
Tom
4. Simpson →
Homer Simpson (famous cartoon!), or
Lisa Simpson
Let’s pick:
Homer
5. Smith →
John Smith,
Emma Smith,
Will Smith
Let’s pick:
John
These are just examples — any common first name works as long as it sounds natural with the last name.
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Final Answer:
Part I: (Depends on audio — no fixed answer without listening)
Part II:
1. c. Amy
2. b. Luke
3. a. Carrie
4. a. Anthony
5. b. Jenny
Part III:
1. David
2. James
3. Tom
4. Homer
5. John
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of spelling work sheets.