To expand the vocabulary of a child, you need to riddle him from early childhood. It is better to start with those simple objects that children use (or watch how adults use them) every day. It can be puzzles about dishes or furniture, familiar interior details or pets. You can also recall riddles about scissors, for example, or other household appliances.
You can pick a rhyme - you can guess a word
A special section is poetic riddles for children who have a rhymed answer. It is usually enough for an adult to read the text with expression, and children with joy and chorus (if there are many) cry out the answer. Usually such puzzles do not cause difficulties and give pleasure to everyone. For instance:
1. Application for brother
I wanted to make Vlad.
Clay, of course, will help her.
And you need paper too.
Pencil to chart
What she needs to cut.
Only an artist forgot
Cook ... (scissors!)
2. Mom cut her nails.
Alla asked mom:
“Mom, be careful!
It’s too painful ... (scissors!) "
3. Milk wanted to open -
He began to gnaw a packet with his teeth.
And he doesn’t crack
But he does not open!
He began to tear his hands -
He did not succumb again!
Mom smiles
Looks - the son is trying.
She did not wait long
And she affectionately said to me:
“There is a safer way!”
And held out ... .... (scissors!)
The task is more difficult, but students will be able to
Puzzles about scissors with rhyme answers are, of course, good. But the answer is too easy for them - he flies off the tongue.
For older children, you need to focus on those classes in which the tool is used, and describe its structure in more detail, comparing details with something similar.
1. The tailor will not prepare the order on time.
A gardener will not cut flowers without us.
Without us, you cannot cut.
They won’t cut you without us.
And the one who will be able to guess us,
The best rating will be - "five"!
(Answer: scissors)
2. Two plastic hands,
Two iron legs
They’ll go along the paper,
And fall apart
Multi-colored sheets.
What is it, you know?
If your audience is, say, 2nd grade, scissors puzzles might look something like this. Children of this age are quite “tough”!