How Are Words Structured?

Words are built like little blocks you stack to make something fun, just like your toy bricks.

How Words Are Made

Imagine each word is made up of letters, and those letters are like different shapes in your toy box. When you put them together, they form words that mean things!

Some words are short and simple, like "dog" or "cat", just a few letters stacked on top of each other.

Other words are longer and have parts inside them. Think about the word "butterfly", it has two parts: "butter" and "fly." Like how you might put together your favorite blocks to make a bigger structure!

Inside Words

Some words even hide special parts that help them do more things.

For example, take the word "running". It starts with "run", which is a simple action, but then it adds "-ing" at the end, like a little sticker that tells you the action is happening right now!

So just like your toy blocks can be used to build anything from a house to a spaceship, letters and parts of words help us make all kinds of cool ideas! Words are built like little blocks you stack to make something fun, just like your toy bricks.

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Examples

  1. A child learns that 'unhappy' is made by adding 'un-' to 'happy'
  2. The word 'teacher' comes from 'teach' plus 'er'
  3. Adding '-s' to 'cat' makes it plural: 'cats'

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Categories: Science · language· grammar· etymology