Spelling practice worksheet focusing on travel-related words with phonetic guidance.
A spelling practice worksheet titled "Travel" with 16 numbered sentences, each containing a word with the first letter underlined and a phonetic spelling provided. The worksheet includes a space for the student's name and date, and a small illustration of a train in the top right corner.
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Travel - All Things Topics
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Travel - All Things Topics
Let's solve this spelling practice worksheet step by step. The task is to correctly spell the words in parentheses, with the first letter of each word underlined (though not visible here, we can infer from context). We’ll go through each sentence and fix the misspelled word.
---
- Correct spelling: *airport*
- "tirpor" → "airport" (common misspelling of airport)
✔ Answer: airport
---
- Correct spelling: *luggage*
- "eaggbag" → likely meant to be "luggage" (a mix-up of letters)
- But wait: "luggage" starts with L, not E. Hmm.
- Another possibility: could it be "baggage"? That would make sense — “carry your baggage”.
- "eaggbag" seems like a jumbled version of baggage.
- But "baggage" starts with B, not E.
Wait — maybe it's "backpack"? No, that doesn’t fit.
Alternatively, perhaps it's "handbag"? But again, starts with H.
Wait — let’s look at the first letter being underlined, which we don't see, but the instruction says: *"The first letter of each word is underlined."* So we must assume the correct word starts with the same letter as the misspelled one.
So:
- "eaggbag" → starts with E
- What word starting with E means something you carry on a train?
→ "eaggbag" is clearly a misspelling of "luggage", but luggage starts with L, not E.
Wait — perhaps it's "egg bag"? No, that doesn't make sense.
Wait — maybe it's "baggage", and the typo is just scrambled.
But "eaggbag" has an E at the beginning — so the intended word must start with E.
Is there a word like "equipment"? But that’s not typical for trains.
Wait — could it be "carry-on"? No.
Another idea: "e-bag"? Not standard.
Wait — maybe it's "luggage", and the student wrote "eaggbag" due to confusion — but that doesn’t help.
Wait — perhaps the correct word is "baggage", and the misspelling is a typo for "baggage" with an E instead of B? Unlikely.
Wait — perhaps it's "luggage", and the "e" is a mistake.
But the instruction says: "The first letter of each word is underlined", so the correct word must start with the same letter as the misspelled one.
So if the misspelled word is "eaggbag", it starts with E, so the correct word must start with E.
What travel-related word starts with E and means something you carry?
→ "Equipment"? Possible, but not common.
→ "Electronics"? No.
Wait — perhaps it's "baggage", and the "e" is a typo for "b"? But then the underlined letter would be B, not E.
Alternatively, maybe the original word was "luggage", and the student misread or mistyped it.
But let’s look at the answer key provided in the image:
> 2. Did you carry your (eaggbag) onto the train?
And in the answer column, it says: luggage
Wait — but "luggage" starts with L, not E.
That suggests a mistake in the worksheet — or perhaps the misspelled word is actually supposed to be "luggage", and "eaggbag" is a typo.
But the user says: "I uploaded an image with a task", and in the image, the answer "luggage" is written.
So perhaps the correct answer is "luggage", even though it starts with L, not E.
But the instruction says: "The first letter of each word is underlined", implying that the correct word should start with the same letter as the misspelled one.
So if the misspelled word is "eaggbag", it starts with E, so the correct word must start with E.
But no common travel word starting with E fits here.
Unless... it's "e-bag"? Not real.
Wait — perhaps it's "baggage", and the "e" is a typo for "b".
But the student might have made a mistake.
Alternatively, maybe the intended word is "luggage", and the misspelled form is "luggabag" or something — but it's written as "eaggbag".
This seems like a typo in the worksheet.
But looking at the answer key in the image: it says "luggage".
So despite the mismatch, the intended answer is luggage.
But let’s move on — maybe we can deduce from context.
---
Actually, let’s re-express the problem.
Looking at the image, the answers are already filled in. For example:
1. airport ✔
2. luggage ✔
3. check-in ✔
4. culture ✔
5. depart ✔
6. gift shop ✔
7. hotel ✔
8. international ✔
9. leave ✔
10. map ✔
11. passport ✔
12. postcard ✔
13. souvenirs ✔
14. ticket ✔
15. tourists ✔
16. visit ✔
So now, we can correct the misspelled words based on the answers.
Let’s go through each one and identify the correct spelling and explain.
---
1. We arrived at the (tirpor) and got on a plane.
→ airport
- "tirpor" is a scrambled version of airport
- Common misspelling: people confuse "air" and "tir"
2. Did you carry your (eaggbag) onto the train?
→ luggage
- "eaggbag" is a garbled version of luggage
- Likely a typo or phonetic error — the correct word is luggage
- Note: This is inconsistent with the first letter (E vs L), but the intended word is luggage
3. When did you (kchec-nf) at the hotel?
→ check-in
- "kchec-nf" → "check-in"
- Misspelled with extra letters and hyphen misplaced
4. What do you know about the (rultce) of Japan?
→ culture
- "rultce" → "culture"
- Letters mixed up; missing 'u' and 'u', has extra 'r'
5. Let's hurry! The airplane will (tepadr) soon!
→ depart
- "tepadr" → "depart"
- Rearranged letters: d-e-p-a-r-t → t-e-p-a-d-r → close to "depart"
6. I want to buy some things at the (ifgt psho).
→ gift shop
- "ifgt psho" → "gift shop"
- Letters jumbled: g-i-f-t → i-f-g-t; s-h-o-p → p-s-h-o
7. He stayed at a very nice 5-star (eholt).
→ hotel
- "eholt" → "hotel"
- Missing 'h', extra 'e'? Wait: "eholt" → "hotel" — e-h-o-t-l → h-o-t-e-l → yes, rearranged
8. Thomas really likes (intematioalna) travel.
→ international
- "intematioalna" → "international"
- Missing 'n', extra 'a', letters out of order
9. When will you (elaev)?
→ leave
- "elaev" → "leave"
- Starts with 'e', but should be 'l'? Wait — "elaev" → "leave" — e-l-a-e-v → l-e-a-v-e
- Again, inconsistency: "elaev" starts with 'e', but "leave" starts with 'l'
- But answer is leave — so likely typo in the misspelled form
10. Of course, we took a (pam) so we didn't get lost.
→ map
- "pam" → "map"
- Letters reversed: m-a-p → p-a-m → "pam"
11. Jenny had to show her (ppoasrft) at the airport.
→ passport
- "ppoasrft" → "passport"
- Extra 'p', letters jumbled
12. She wants to buy a (osctairpd) and send it to her friend.
→ postcard
- "osctairpd" → "postcard"
- Letters: o-s-c-t-a-i-r-p-d → p-o-s-t-c-a-r-d → yes
13. My father bought some (siovneirs) to remember his time in Paris.
→ souvenirs
- "siovneirs" → "souvenirs"
- Missing 'u', extra 'v'? Wait: s-i-o-v-n-e-i-r-s → s-o-u-v-e-n-i-r-s → missing 'u', has 'i' twice
14. I forgot to bring my train (ckietf), so I couldn't get on the train.
→ ticket
- "ckietf" → "ticket"
- Letters: c-k-i-e-t-f → t-i-c-k-e-t → yes, jumbled
15. There were many (sstoiurt) taking pictures with their cameras.
→ tourists
- "sstoiurt" → "tourists"
- s-s-t-o-i-u-r-t → t-o-u-r-i-s-t-s → yes
16. We flew to New Zealand to (hys) our relatives.
→ visit
- "hys" → "visit"
- "hys" is not related — but answer is "visit"
- Probably a typo: maybe meant to be "vis" or "vist"
- But "hys" → "visit" — no clear connection
- Wait: "hys" might be a typo for "visit"?
- Or perhaps "hys" = "visit" phonetically? No.
Wait — "hys" → "visit"? Doesn't match.
But the answer is visit.
So likely, the misspelled word was meant to be "vis" or "vist", but written as "hys".
Alternatively, "hys" could be a typo for "visit", but that’s a stretch.
Wait — maybe it’s "see"? But "hys" doesn’t match.
Wait — perhaps it’s "visit", and the misspelled form is "vist", but written as "hys" — probably a typo.
But given that the answer is visit, we accept that.
---
| # | Misspelled Word | Correct Word |
|---|------------------|--------------|
| 1 | tirpor | airport |
| 2 | eaggbag | luggage |
| 3 | kchec-nf | check-in |
| 4 | rultce | culture |
| 5 | tepadr | depart |
| 6 | ifgt psho | gift shop |
| 7 | eholt | hotel |
| 8 | intematioalna | international |
| 9 | elaev | leave |
|10 | pam | map |
|11 | ppoasrft | passport |
|12 | osctairpd | postcard |
|13 | siovneirs | souvenirs |
|14 | ckietf | ticket |
|15 | sstoiurt | tourists |
|16 | hys | visit |
---
- Airport: "tirpor" is a common phonetic misspelling — students may hear "air port" and write "tirpor".
- Luggage: "eaggbag" is a jumbled version — likely meant to be "luggage" (possibly confused with "baggage").
- Check-in: "kchec-nf" has letters mixed and hyphen wrong.
- Culture: "rultce" is scrambled — missing 'u' and 'u'.
- Depart: "tepadr" → "depart" — letters rearranged.
- Gift shop: "ifgt psho" → "gift shop" — jumbled letters.
- Hotel: "eholt" → "hotel" — letters shuffled.
- International: "intematioalna" — missing 'n', extra 'a', etc.
- Leave: "elaev" → "leave" — likely a typo for "leave" (should start with 'l').
- Map: "pam" → "map" — reversed.
- Passport: "ppoasrft" → "passport" — extra 'p', jumbled.
- Postcard: "osctairpd" → "postcard" — letters rearranged.
- Souvenirs: "siovneirs" → "souvenirs" — missing 'u'.
- Ticket: "ckietf" → "ticket" — jumbled.
- Tourists: "sstoiurt" → "tourists" — extra 's', jumbled.
- Visit: "hys" → "visit" — likely a typo; possibly meant to be "vist" or "vis".
---
Despite some inconsistencies in the first letters (e.g., "eaggbag" → "luggage" starts with L, not E), the intended correct words are as listed above. These are common travel-related vocabulary words, and the exercise aims to improve spelling and vocabulary.
If you're using this for teaching, consider reviewing common misspellings and emphasizing correct spelling patterns.
Let me know if you'd like a printable version or flashcards!
---
1. We arrived at the (tirpor) and got on a plane.
- Correct spelling: *airport*
- "tirpor" → "airport" (common misspelling of airport)
✔ Answer: airport
---
2. Did you carry your (eaggbag) onto the train?
- Correct spelling: *luggage*
- "eaggbag" → likely meant to be "luggage" (a mix-up of letters)
- But wait: "luggage" starts with L, not E. Hmm.
- Another possibility: could it be "baggage"? That would make sense — “carry your baggage”.
- "eaggbag" seems like a jumbled version of baggage.
- But "baggage" starts with B, not E.
Wait — maybe it's "backpack"? No, that doesn’t fit.
Alternatively, perhaps it's "handbag"? But again, starts with H.
Wait — let’s look at the first letter being underlined, which we don't see, but the instruction says: *"The first letter of each word is underlined."* So we must assume the correct word starts with the same letter as the misspelled one.
So:
- "eaggbag" → starts with E
- What word starting with E means something you carry on a train?
→ "eaggbag" is clearly a misspelling of "luggage", but luggage starts with L, not E.
Wait — perhaps it's "egg bag"? No, that doesn't make sense.
Wait — maybe it's "baggage", and the typo is just scrambled.
But "eaggbag" has an E at the beginning — so the intended word must start with E.
Is there a word like "equipment"? But that’s not typical for trains.
Wait — could it be "carry-on"? No.
Another idea: "e-bag"? Not standard.
Wait — maybe it's "luggage", and the student wrote "eaggbag" due to confusion — but that doesn’t help.
Wait — perhaps the correct word is "baggage", and the misspelling is a typo for "baggage" with an E instead of B? Unlikely.
Wait — perhaps it's "luggage", and the "e" is a mistake.
But the instruction says: "The first letter of each word is underlined", so the correct word must start with the same letter as the misspelled one.
So if the misspelled word is "eaggbag", it starts with E, so the correct word must start with E.
What travel-related word starts with E and means something you carry?
→ "Equipment"? Possible, but not common.
→ "Electronics"? No.
Wait — perhaps it's "baggage", and the "e" is a typo for "b"? But then the underlined letter would be B, not E.
Alternatively, maybe the original word was "luggage", and the student misread or mistyped it.
But let’s look at the answer key provided in the image:
> 2. Did you carry your (eaggbag) onto the train?
And in the answer column, it says: luggage
Wait — but "luggage" starts with L, not E.
That suggests a mistake in the worksheet — or perhaps the misspelled word is actually supposed to be "luggage", and "eaggbag" is a typo.
But the user says: "I uploaded an image with a task", and in the image, the answer "luggage" is written.
So perhaps the correct answer is "luggage", even though it starts with L, not E.
But the instruction says: "The first letter of each word is underlined", implying that the correct word should start with the same letter as the misspelled one.
So if the misspelled word is "eaggbag", it starts with E, so the correct word must start with E.
But no common travel word starting with E fits here.
Unless... it's "e-bag"? Not real.
Wait — perhaps it's "baggage", and the "e" is a typo for "b".
But the student might have made a mistake.
Alternatively, maybe the intended word is "luggage", and the misspelled form is "luggabag" or something — but it's written as "eaggbag".
This seems like a typo in the worksheet.
But looking at the answer key in the image: it says "luggage".
So despite the mismatch, the intended answer is luggage.
But let’s move on — maybe we can deduce from context.
---
Actually, let’s re-express the problem.
Looking at the image, the answers are already filled in. For example:
1. airport ✔
2. luggage ✔
3. check-in ✔
4. culture ✔
5. depart ✔
6. gift shop ✔
7. hotel ✔
8. international ✔
9. leave ✔
10. map ✔
11. passport ✔
12. postcard ✔
13. souvenirs ✔
14. ticket ✔
15. tourists ✔
16. visit ✔
So now, we can correct the misspelled words based on the answers.
Let’s go through each one and identify the correct spelling and explain.
---
✔ Corrected Spelling Practice:
1. We arrived at the (tirpor) and got on a plane.
→ airport
- "tirpor" is a scrambled version of airport
- Common misspelling: people confuse "air" and "tir"
2. Did you carry your (eaggbag) onto the train?
→ luggage
- "eaggbag" is a garbled version of luggage
- Likely a typo or phonetic error — the correct word is luggage
- Note: This is inconsistent with the first letter (E vs L), but the intended word is luggage
3. When did you (kchec-nf) at the hotel?
→ check-in
- "kchec-nf" → "check-in"
- Misspelled with extra letters and hyphen misplaced
4. What do you know about the (rultce) of Japan?
→ culture
- "rultce" → "culture"
- Letters mixed up; missing 'u' and 'u', has extra 'r'
5. Let's hurry! The airplane will (tepadr) soon!
→ depart
- "tepadr" → "depart"
- Rearranged letters: d-e-p-a-r-t → t-e-p-a-d-r → close to "depart"
6. I want to buy some things at the (ifgt psho).
→ gift shop
- "ifgt psho" → "gift shop"
- Letters jumbled: g-i-f-t → i-f-g-t; s-h-o-p → p-s-h-o
7. He stayed at a very nice 5-star (eholt).
→ hotel
- "eholt" → "hotel"
- Missing 'h', extra 'e'? Wait: "eholt" → "hotel" — e-h-o-t-l → h-o-t-e-l → yes, rearranged
8. Thomas really likes (intematioalna) travel.
→ international
- "intematioalna" → "international"
- Missing 'n', extra 'a', letters out of order
9. When will you (elaev)?
→ leave
- "elaev" → "leave"
- Starts with 'e', but should be 'l'? Wait — "elaev" → "leave" — e-l-a-e-v → l-e-a-v-e
- Again, inconsistency: "elaev" starts with 'e', but "leave" starts with 'l'
- But answer is leave — so likely typo in the misspelled form
10. Of course, we took a (pam) so we didn't get lost.
→ map
- "pam" → "map"
- Letters reversed: m-a-p → p-a-m → "pam"
11. Jenny had to show her (ppoasrft) at the airport.
→ passport
- "ppoasrft" → "passport"
- Extra 'p', letters jumbled
12. She wants to buy a (osctairpd) and send it to her friend.
→ postcard
- "osctairpd" → "postcard"
- Letters: o-s-c-t-a-i-r-p-d → p-o-s-t-c-a-r-d → yes
13. My father bought some (siovneirs) to remember his time in Paris.
→ souvenirs
- "siovneirs" → "souvenirs"
- Missing 'u', extra 'v'? Wait: s-i-o-v-n-e-i-r-s → s-o-u-v-e-n-i-r-s → missing 'u', has 'i' twice
14. I forgot to bring my train (ckietf), so I couldn't get on the train.
→ ticket
- "ckietf" → "ticket"
- Letters: c-k-i-e-t-f → t-i-c-k-e-t → yes, jumbled
15. There were many (sstoiurt) taking pictures with their cameras.
→ tourists
- "sstoiurt" → "tourists"
- s-s-t-o-i-u-r-t → t-o-u-r-i-s-t-s → yes
16. We flew to New Zealand to (hys) our relatives.
→ visit
- "hys" → "visit"
- "hys" is not related — but answer is "visit"
- Probably a typo: maybe meant to be "vis" or "vist"
- But "hys" → "visit" — no clear connection
- Wait: "hys" might be a typo for "visit"?
- Or perhaps "hys" = "visit" phonetically? No.
Wait — "hys" → "visit"? Doesn't match.
But the answer is visit.
So likely, the misspelled word was meant to be "vis" or "vist", but written as "hys".
Alternatively, "hys" could be a typo for "visit", but that’s a stretch.
Wait — maybe it’s "see"? But "hys" doesn’t match.
Wait — perhaps it’s "visit", and the misspelled form is "vist", but written as "hys" — probably a typo.
But given that the answer is visit, we accept that.
---
✔ Final Answers (Corrected Words):
| # | Misspelled Word | Correct Word |
|---|------------------|--------------|
| 1 | tirpor | airport |
| 2 | eaggbag | luggage |
| 3 | kchec-nf | check-in |
| 4 | rultce | culture |
| 5 | tepadr | depart |
| 6 | ifgt psho | gift shop |
| 7 | eholt | hotel |
| 8 | intematioalna | international |
| 9 | elaev | leave |
|10 | pam | map |
|11 | ppoasrft | passport |
|12 | osctairpd | postcard |
|13 | siovneirs | souvenirs |
|14 | ckietf | ticket |
|15 | sstoiurt | tourists |
|16 | hys | visit |
---
🔍 Explanation of Key Corrections:
- Airport: "tirpor" is a common phonetic misspelling — students may hear "air port" and write "tirpor".
- Luggage: "eaggbag" is a jumbled version — likely meant to be "luggage" (possibly confused with "baggage").
- Check-in: "kchec-nf" has letters mixed and hyphen wrong.
- Culture: "rultce" is scrambled — missing 'u' and 'u'.
- Depart: "tepadr" → "depart" — letters rearranged.
- Gift shop: "ifgt psho" → "gift shop" — jumbled letters.
- Hotel: "eholt" → "hotel" — letters shuffled.
- International: "intematioalna" — missing 'n', extra 'a', etc.
- Leave: "elaev" → "leave" — likely a typo for "leave" (should start with 'l').
- Map: "pam" → "map" — reversed.
- Passport: "ppoasrft" → "passport" — extra 'p', jumbled.
- Postcard: "osctairpd" → "postcard" — letters rearranged.
- Souvenirs: "siovneirs" → "souvenirs" — missing 'u'.
- Ticket: "ckietf" → "ticket" — jumbled.
- Tourists: "sstoiurt" → "tourists" — extra 's', jumbled.
- Visit: "hys" → "visit" — likely a typo; possibly meant to be "vist" or "vis".
---
✔ Summary:
Despite some inconsistencies in the first letters (e.g., "eaggbag" → "luggage" starts with L, not E), the intended correct words are as listed above. These are common travel-related vocabulary words, and the exercise aims to improve spelling and vocabulary.
If you're using this for teaching, consider reviewing common misspellings and emphasizing correct spelling patterns.
Let me know if you'd like a printable version or flashcards!
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of travel worksheet.