Let me carefully examine the image to identify which pictures start with the /th/ sound.
First, I'll go through each picture one by one and think about what it represents and how it's pronounced:
1. A hand giving a thumbs-up → "thumb" → starts with /th/
2. An alarm clock → "clock" → starts with /cl/, not /th/
3. A brush → "brush" → starts with /br/, not /th/
4. A rock rolling down a hill → "rock" → starts with /r/, not /th/
5. A potted plant with purple flowers → "plant" → starts with /pl/, not /th/
6. A clown with a spoon → "clown" → starts with /cl/, not /th/
7. The number 3 → "three" → starts with /th/
8. A squirrel → "squirrel" → starts with /sk/, not /th/
9. A thimble → "thimble" → starts with /th/
10. A hamburger → "hamburger" → starts with /h/, not /th/
11. Two people walking (maybe "them"? but it's unclear) → if it's "them", that starts with /th/
12. A crocodile → "crocodile" → starts with /cr/, not /th/
13. A soda can spilling → "soda" → starts with /s/, not /th/
14. A thief (person in blue mask) → "thief" → starts with /th/
15. A rabbit → "rabbit" → starts with /r/, not /th/
16. Santa Claus → "Santa" → starts with /s/, not /th/
17. A boy sweating → maybe "thirsty"? but it's unclear; likely "boy" or "sweating"
18. A microscope → "microscope" → starts with /m/, not /th/
19. A robot on a toilet → unclear, probably not /th/
20. A candy → "candy" → starts with /c/, not /th/
Let me zoom in on the ambiguous ones to be sure.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of th sound worksheet.