Learn English vocabulary through pictures and visuals to make English learning easier and quicker. A picture worth a thousand words, said by wise people. Pictures play the greatest role in learning any language, we start learning by observing things around us, the same thing we do from our childhood, and we learn any language easily.
A picture is a worth thousand words!
This is a famous adage said by some sage, We sometimes have to say a lot to convey our message or idea, but the same thing can be done by just showing a picture, I’ll try to correlate the same concept here. When we learn English vocabulary, we try to learn it from our native/mother language to English language but if we do the same thing by learning through pictures or visuals we can memorize it for longer even if the pictures used properly, we never forget the concepts or names of those things. Picture vocabulary particularly helps to learn the names of different things.
Picture Vocabulary is a must for kids!
Kids learn English through visuals very fast, So, we are here help cutie pies. Help your kids learning English by printing the worksheets and vocabulary charts today.
Home English Vocabulary English Vocabulary with Pictures. 13 Pictures to Improve Your Vocabulary
- English Vocabulary
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Anastasia Koltai
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March 22, 2013
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A picture paints a thousand words, it’s true, and pictures are a great way of improving your English, especially if you are a visual learner. So, use pictures to learn vocabulary, and grammar. Don’t just look at pictures, think about them. Discuss them. See if you can discribe what’s happening in them, and name everything in them.
Visit photo blogs and read the descriptions you will find there. You can join a photo sharing site and share your own pictures and access thousands of photographs. The Learn English Network is on Flickr, with Flickr you can leave notes on other people’s pictures and enter into discussions with people all round the world about their photographs. It’s a great social experience, and a nice way of getting to know people. You can apply to join the Learn English Flickr group too (forum rules apply), where you can share your own pictures or just look at ours.
There are other photo sharing sites, like Picassa, Photobucket, Shutterfly and Snapfish, and you can share pictures on the forum or on Facebook. Just make sure they are pictures you would be proud to show your grandmother.
I use lots of illustrations and pictures on the Network, and by popular request here are the Picture It and Vocabulary pages in alphabetical order.
Adjectives (English grammar in pictures)
Adverbs (English grammar in pictures)
Animals (English vocabulary in pictures)
Appearances (English vocabulary in pictures)
Articles (English grammar in pictures)
Buildings (English vocabulary in pictures)
Clothes (English vocabulary in pictures)
Colours (English vocabulary in pictures)
Comparative Adjectives (English grammar in pictures)
Eating at home (English vocabulary in pictures)
Eating out (English vocabulary in pictures)
Education (English vocabulary in pictures)
Entertainment (English vocabulary in pictures)
Food (English vocabulary in pictures)
Greetings (English vocabulary in pictures)
Human Body (English vocabulary in pictures)
Jobs and Work (English vocabulary in pictures)
Money (English vocabulary in pictures)
Nationalities (English vocabulary in pictures)
Prepositions of movement (English grammar in pictures)
Prepositions of place (English grammar in pictures)
Prepositions of time (English grammar in pictures)
Present Continuous Tense (English grammar in pictures)
Rooms in a house (English vocabulary in pictures)
Seasons (English vocabulary in pictures)
Shapes (English vocabulary in pictures)
Shopping (English vocabulary in pictures)
Sport (English vocabulary in pictures)
Superlative Adjectives (English grammar in pictures)
Tenses (English grammar in pictures)
Time (English vocabulary in pictures)
Transport (English vocabulary in pictures)
Weather (English vocabulary in pictures)
English in Pictures (General words and idioms)
Irregular Verbs
to break | to build | to buy
to die | to drink | to drive
to eat | to grow | to know
to lead | to lose | to make
to run | to sing | to spend
to teach | to think | to throw
to wear | to win
Words in pictures
armchair
backbone |
backlog |
bedspring |
bittersweet |
blackmail |
blackout
bolthole |
brainstorm |
breadbin |
butterfly
cardboard |
carpet |
chairman |
childhood |
Christmas tree
copyright |
earring
fingerprint |
firework |
flagship |
freehold
friendship |
frostbite
grasshopper |
gridlock |
gunpowder
haircut |
headdress |
headphones |
heartbreak
keyboard
lawsuit |
lipstick |
livestock |
loanshark |
loophole
manhandle |
mastercopy |
nightcap |
nightmare |
overhear
pigtail |
pillowcase |
ponytail |
receivership
scarecrow |
sinkhole |
skyscraper
soapbox |
stepladder
teamwork |
timesheet |
timetable |
tiptoe |
toothpaste |
toothpick
wallpaper |
waterfall |
whitewash |
workmanship |
workout
By
Last updated:
January 20, 2021
Ever been in a maze?
It’s a puzzle where you have to escape, but the route is twisted and blocked at every turn.
Mazes can be fun, or they can be terribly frustrating.
Any English learner knows this!
English learning often feels like a maze. It seems as though you’re heading down a very long road, and even though you’ve been walking for hours, the end doesn’t get any closer.
Why keep walking in circles?
Let’s cut through the maze and try something different. Something imaginative. Something that makes your eyes light up!
If you’re looking for a new English learning path, picture dictionaries may be your route to success. Many people learn best through images rather than just text or audio.
Here are our four favorite English picture dictionaries that you can get as books, apps or even video. We’ll also show you one inventive option that you can personalize yourself.
Download:
This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you
can take anywhere.
Click here to get a copy. (Download)
Why Is a Picture Dictionary Useful?
A picture dictionary creates a visual link between a new word and its meaning, by using images to illustrate vocabulary. It helps you to form an association between English words and the real world.
Picture dictionaries also add variety to your studies. If English learning is starting to feel like a chore, that might be a sign that the tools you’re using aren’t quite right for you. Don’t be disheartened! There’s always time to explore new methods.
Remember that everyone learns vocabulary in different ways. Picture dictionaries are especially ideal for visual learners, who memorize ideas through images and symbols. If in your native language you tend to study this way, it’s great to apply the same method to learning English. It makes the whole process a lot less daunting and unfamiliar.
Does this sound like you? You can get many of the same benefits through videos on FluentU.
No matter your learning style, you’ll boost your vocabulary while absorbing English the way native speakers actually use it.
The 4 Best English Picture Dictionaries (Plus a Personalized Bonus)
If you know for sure that visual learning is your style, you might want to invest in a picture dictionary. There are a number of English picture dictionaries that you can access completely free, both as books and on your phone or computer.
Then we’ll also show you how to create your own, personalized English picture dictionary.
DK “Bilingual Visual Dictionary” Series
The DK bilingual English picture dictionaries are available for many languages, from French to Russian to Japanese. They’re filled with clear photographs and diagrams labeled with vocabulary in both languages. Just click the link above and scroll down to browse for your native language.
Not only are they really useful, they’re also pretty nice to look at!
These books are an ideal companion because they’re organized clearly by theme, making it far easier for you to find a word than in a traditional bilingual dictionary. If you find it hard to break down your learning by focus, these books create a great framework to build your vocabulary.
DK recently created an iPhone app that’s an audio companion to six of their visual dictionaries. You can use it to check the pronunciation of several thousand words and phrases.
Memrise English Visual Dictionary
There are lots of picture dictionaries on the Memrise app, but this one is particularly easy to use. It’s broken down into 40 different categories, including emotions, medical care and transport.
This dictionary is great because it prioritizes the words that you really need to know. It can be quite overwhelming to pick up a dictionary and realize that you’re holding the entirety of the English language in your hands. This one is clear and concise, with obvious and high-quality images.
This picture dictionary is a great resource for when you’re on the go, as you can always carry it with you on your phone.
The Merriam-Webster Visual Dictionary Online
If you’re not sure about paying for a book, the Merriam-Webster picture dictionary is completely free. It isn’t quite as interactive as Memrise, but it’s the best place to find illustrated examples of more unusual words and technical terms.
If you’re feeling pretty confident with how your English is developing, this dictionary can help you prepare for some slightly more complicated scenarios that you might encounter. One area it covers in detail is household issues, such as plumbing, carpentry and heating.
For example, in the event of a leak or electrical problem, this dictionary will ensure you can identify the faucets or fuses that aren’t working.
Oxford Picture Dictionary Videos
This YouTube channel has turned the “Oxford Picture Dictionary” into a series of free videos. Each video focuses on a different theme, showing a slideshow of pictures with the English word spoken clearly at the same time.
While these might not be the most exciting videos you could watch on YouTube, they’re great for building up an association between sounds, images and words. If you have a spare few moments at work or before you go to bed, watching one of these could be a quick and easy way of slipping a little extra vocabulary study into your day.
Create Your Own Picture Dictionary
A picture dictionary doesn’t have to be as simple as just a book or site. If you’re creative, then why not put that skill to use when you’re learning English? Here’s how.
Choose 10 English words you want to learn and write them out clearly on a large sheet of paper. Below each word, draw a simple illustration, then hang the paper somewhere you’ll see it often.
Most people find it easiest to learn words thematically, so try to choose them by topic. It’s fine to really narrow down what you study if you think it’ll make it easier to remember. Food is a very broad area to cover, but breakfast foods is much more manageable.
Take a few minutes each day to look at the words and the pictures until they start to become familiar. When you begin to feel confident with the vocabulary, cover the words with a sticky note or small flap of paper so that you can only see the pictures.
Test yourself by looking at each image and saying or writing down the matching word. Once you feel you know them well, you can move on to a new set of vocabulary. But remember to keep coming back to the words you’ve already covered to refresh your memory. Even if it’s been a week or two, you should find that the picture triggers your memory of the vocabulary.
If you’re feeling even more inventive—and the people you live with aren’t fussy—you can go as far as to turn your home into a visual dictionary. With a label-maker or stack of sticky notes, label key items in your house with the corresponding English word.
Each time you see an item, you’ll be reminded instantly of what it’s called.
Don’t go crazy and label everything at once! Start out with items that you use every day, because you’re more likely to require the English word for them. It’s better to know 20 useful objects such as kettle, corkscrew and toothbrush, than to struggle memorizing hundreds of random things you find laying around your room.
Learning through visuals is a really valuable skill, so take advantage of it! If you’ve found that reading over words again and again is getting you nowhere, that certainly doesn’t mean that you can’t be a skilled English speaker. Exploring a visual learning style may help you find a totally fresh approach to how you understand English.
Download:
This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you
can take anywhere.
Click here to get a copy. (Download)
archery
Archery is practiced for sport and for hunting. The person is called an archer. He or she uses a bow and arrow. (Image source)
blister
Blisters are little pockets of skin filled with fluid, which form when there is repeated friction on the skin in a particular place. (Image source)
cilantro / coriander
Coriander or cilantro is often chopped up (cut into tiny pieces) and used as a flavoring in many dishes. (Image source)
deck
A wooden platform attached to a house, used for leisure, is also called a deck. (Image source)
easel
An easel is a wooden support that hold the canvas for painting or drawing.
filter
A filter removes small particles from a liquid. This is a coffee filter.
goatee
A goatee is a small beard that only covers the chin.
hammock
A hammock is a piece of fabric or a net suspended by attaching it to the walls, used for sleeping or resting. (Image source)
icing
Icing is a sugary paste used on cakes, cupcakes, donuts, and cookies. It can also be called “frosting.” (Image source)
jade
Jade is a green stone used for jewelry and decoration.
keg
A keg is a round metal barrel. Nowadays, kegs are often used for beer.
lace
Lace is a delicate pattern of fabric with openings in the design.
mussels
needle
Needles like this one are used in sewing. In medicine, doctors use needles to give injections. (Image source)
oars
Oars are used to manually make a boat move through the water. (Image source)
paw
The word paw refers to the soft foot of a mammal, such as a cat or dog. (Image source)
quilt
A quilt is a blanket made by putting various pieces of fabric together, often in a decorative design. (Image source)
recliner
A recliner is a type of chair, where you can make the back part go down so that you can recline (lay back).
sandpaper
Sandpaper is used for rubbing rough surfaces to make them smooth. (Image source)
trampoline
A trampoline is an elastic surface that’s fun to jump on.
ulcer
An ulcer is a hole in the wall of your stomach. It is painful and sometimes requires surgery. (Image source)
vault
A vault is a very secure area (usually inside a bank) where valuables are kept. A vault is big enough to walk inside. A small locked metal box is called a safe.
windbreaker
A windbreaker is a very light jacket
xerox
Xerox is the name of a company that makes copy machines. However, some people call them “xerox machines” or use “xerox” as a verb to mean “make copies.” (Image source)
yawn
You yawn (open your mouth wide) when you’re tired or bored. (Image source)
zucchini
A zucchini is a type of vegetable.