Let’s solve this step by step.
We need to fill in the blanks for each weather word based on the picture above it.
1. First picture: Sun → The word is “s_n_y”
Think: What do we call sunny weather? It’s “sunny”. So, missing letters are “u” and “n”.
→ s_u_n_n_y → Wait, that’s too many letters. Let’s count: s _ n _ y → 5 letters total.
Actually, “sunny” has 5 letters: S-U-N-N-Y → but here it’s written as s _ n _ y → so positions 2 and 4 are blank.
That means: s [u] n [n] y → But wait — that would be “sunny”, which fits!
However, looking again: the blank pattern is “s_n_y” — that’s 5 characters with blanks at position 2 and 4.
“Sunny” = S-U-N-N-Y → so yes: s[u]n[n]y → but that’s two N’s? Hmm… maybe it’s meant to be “sunny” with one N? No, “sunny” has double N.
Let me check standard spelling: “sunny” → S-U-N-N-Y → 5 letters.
Pattern given: s _ n _ y → that’s 5 slots: 1=s, 2=?, 3=n, 4=?, 5=y → so if we put U in slot 2 and N in slot 4 → s-u-n-n-y → perfect.
✔ So first answer:
sunny
Wait — actually, let’s look at all words together to avoid confusion.
Let’s go one by one carefully:
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Picture 1: Sun → Word: s _ n _ y
Common weather word: “sunny” → S-U-N-N-Y → matches s[u]n[n]y → so blanks are U and N.
But hold on — sometimes worksheets simplify. Is there a 5-letter word for sun? “Sunny” is correct.
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Picture 2: Wind swirls → Word: w _ n _ y
Weather word: “windy” → W-I-N-D-Y → 5 letters → w[i]n[d]y → blanks are I and D.
✔ windy
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Picture 3: Clouds → Word: c _ ou _ y
Looks like “cloudy” → C-L-O-U-D-Y → 6 letters.
Pattern: c _ ou _ y → that’s 6 characters: c, _, o, u, _, y → so positions 2 and 5 are blank.
“Cloudy” = C-L-O-U-D-Y → so position 2 = L, position 5 = D → c[l]ou[d]y → perfect.
✔ cloudy
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Picture 4: Raindrops from cloud → Word: ra _ _ y
Rainy → R-A-I-N-Y → 5 letters → ra[i][n]y → blanks are I and N.
✔ rainy
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Picture 5: Lightning + clouds → Word: s _ o _ my
Stormy → S-T-O-R-M-Y → 6 letters → s[t]o[r]my → blanks are T and R.
✔ stormy
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Picture 6: Snowflakes falling → Word: sn _ _ y
Snowy → S-N-O-W-Y → 5 letters → sn[o][w]y → blanks are O and W.
✔ snowy
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Now let’s list them clearly:
1. s _ n _ y → sunny → fill with
u and
n
2. w _ n _ y → windy → fill with
i and
d
3. c _ ou _ y → cloudy → fill with
l and
d
4. ra _ _ y → rainy → fill with
i and
n
5. s _ o _ my → stormy → fill with
t and
r
6. sn _ _ y → snowy → fill with
o and
w
All make sense and match common weather words.
Final Answer:
sunny, windy, cloudy, rainy, stormy, snowy
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of weather worksheet.