Is her a tricky word


На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать грубую лексику.


На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать разговорную лексику.


Empire is a tricky word to define.


? Exploitation? is, of course, a tricky word when it comes something like Wikipedia.



«Эксплуатация», конечно, сложное слово, когда речь идет о Википедии.


And «moral» has become a tricky word, unfortunately.


It’s a tricky word, isn’t it?


This tricky word is called monetization tactics popular in Japan, in which developers give players random items in exchange for a premium game currency.



Gacha — это название популярной в Японии тактики монетизации, при которой разработчики выдают игрокам случайные предметы в обмен на игровую премиум-валюту.


I think today ‘beautiful’, which is always a tricky word, but now it’s become an incendiary word, because in many ways today beauty is obsolete and not the main concern of art.



Я думаю, что сегодня «красота», которая всегда была сложным понятием, сейчас стала зажигательным словом, потому что во многих случаях слово это устарело и не является уже главной заботой искусства.


This is such a phenomenon (in scientific called tricky word — channeling), when the person begins to write in the languages in which he does not know to paint landscapes of bygone civilizations.



Это такой феномен (по научному названный мудрёным словом — ченнелинг), когда человек начинает писать на тех языках, которые он не знает, рисовать ландшафты давно ушедших цивилизаций.


Do not be confused by tricky word «elliptical», we note only that this kind of exercise equipment that you probably already known: the riders, Steppers, treadmills, stationary bikes and other…



Пусть вас не смущает мудреное слово «эллиптический», отметим лишь, что это вид тех тренажеров, которые вам, наверняка, уже известны: райдеры, степперы, беговые дорожки, велотренажеры и прочие.


That’s a tricky word, of course.

Ничего не найдено для этого значения.

Результатов: 10. Точных совпадений: 10. Затраченное время: 43 мс

Documents

Корпоративные решения

Спряжение

Синонимы

Корректор

Справка и о нас

Индекс слова: 1-300, 301-600, 601-900

Индекс выражения: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

Индекс фразы: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

‘Tricky’ words are not tricky because they are hard! That’s the most important thing to understand.

Many children are put off them because they think they are difficult, as well as there being some parents that don’t want to practise them with their child because they sound intimidating.

‘Tricky’ words are called that because you can’t sound them out. That’s all there is to them!

So, in short, what is a ‘tricky’ word?

A ‘tricky’ word is one that cannot be sounded out. They are words that are non-phonetic. If you sound them out and then try to blend the sounds, you will get a word that does not sound right. They are words that must be recognized by sight.

If that sounds slightly confusing, in a moment I will go into this in greater depth to make things as clear as possible.

Also, many people have lots of other questions like how do you teach tricky words? What games can you play? When should you start learning them? What order do you learn them in?

I will answer all of these questions for you in this article, and hopefully set you up for success in teaching ‘tricky’ words to children.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is tricky-words.jpg

What Tricky Words Are

‘Tricky’ words are non-phonetic.

Some languages have more words that are non-phonetic in them than others. Italian, for example, is almost entirely phonetic. However, English has a much greater balance between words that you can sound out and words that you can’t.

Therefore, when children try to learn English, they need to be able to use phonics to read many words, but also to memorize many words by sight as well. There are two skills that combine to help them read all the available words.

Tricky words are these words that need to be memorized, for the simple reason that if you sound them out it doesn’t sound right.

An example is the word ‘be’. If this was written phonetically, it would be written ‘bee’.

However, if children try to sound out ‘b’ then ‘e’, they would then blend the word ‘beh.’

All tricky words are like this! The are tricky because you can’t sound them out – it’s that simple!

What Is Sounding Out Words?

Early phonics works by children sounding out words. For example the word ‘dog’ can be broken into three sounds (or phonemes) ‘d-o-g.’ (If you want to find out what phonemes are in more detail, then check this out.)

They then ‘blend’ the sounds to make the word ‘dog’. Blending is basically merging the sounds together to make a word.

To find out the full lowdown on what blending in phonics is, then check out this article.

For most words in simple texts, children will be able to use this method of sounding out each word. ‘Tricky’ words are the exception. You’ve just got to sight-learn them.

What Are The Tricky Words?

The tricky words are usually taught in an order. Though this differs from country to country, and also across different reading schemes within those countries, this is roughly the order to go for:

I , no, to, the, go, into

he, she, we, me, be, you, are, her, was, all, they, my

said, have, like, so, do, some, come, were, there, little, one, when, out, what

These are the main ones to learn certainly within the first year of learning phonics (though some children will take longer than this).

High Frequency Words V Tricky Words

There are similarities between high frequency words and tricky words, but there are also differences.

First, the similarities:

  • Some high frequency words are ‘tricky’ words. (However, there are many that are not)
  • It is good to be able to just sight-read both
  • They are taught in the order of their frequency in English. For example, the word ‘the’ is one of the most common words, and is also one of the first to be taught

Now the differences:

  • The main difference between the two is that some high-frequency words can be sounded out. Examples are ‘is’, ‘it’ and ‘and’. However, it is best if children can just read them without sounding out if possible. Phonics is just a stepping stone to word recognition. The more speed and fluency children can get into their reading the better
  • High-frequency words can become sight words. Sight words are words that you read without decoding. However, ‘tricky’ words are always sight words.

When To Start Teaching Them

To find maximum success with ‘tricky’ words, it is definitely worth teaching them at the right time.

I think it is important to wait until the following are true:

  • Children know quite a few phonemes. It is best to let them learn lots of these as a warm-up for recognizing full words (which is quite a bit harder)
  • Children should be able to sound out words, and understand how this works (Even though this is not a skill required for ‘tricky’ words, they need to know how normal phonetic words work before going on to the variation 
  • It is best if children are at least beginning to blend. They need to have experience and knowledge of what phonetic words are first, before you then go and muddy the waters a bit by adding in words that work differently. In an ideal world they would probably be able to blend three-letter words independently, but even if they are just starting to do this, then they have a much greater chance at reading ‘tricky’ words.

When these things have both happened, children are ready and rearing to go with learning ‘tricky’ words. But how do you introduce them?

How To Introduce Tricky Words

The classic way to introduce ‘tricky’ words is the following:

  • Show the word and say it
  • Put the word into a sentence. Then put it into another sentence
  • See if the children can put the word into their own sentences
  • Practise reading the tricky word in a simple caption
  • Practise writing the tricky word
  • Next day, refresh their memory by showing the word again, whilst adding another word to their repertoire
  • Keep their memory fresh by showing flashcards in different fun ways for the foreseeable future

So, to teach the word ‘she’, it might go something like this:

  • Show ‘she’ and say it
  • Put it into a sentence, e.g. ‘She went on the bus.’
  • The children make up sentences, e.g. ‘She is going to the zoo.’
  • Write ‘she’
  • Read ‘She is a cat.’

That’s pretty much all there is to it. Just repeat this process every time you teach a ‘tricky’ word.

Adult-Led Games To Teach Tricky Words

The big thing is to regularly practise ‘tricky’ words. The more good-quality practise you do, the more fluent the children will get.

The big problem is making this enjoyable.

‘Tricky’ words can be a bit boring! If you just show flashcards with ‘tricky’ words on day after day, many children will switch off.

Luckily, there are lots of fun games you can play to jazz this process up and keep them interested!

To start with, here are a few adult led games that you can play, to get them enjoying the process:

1.Spy Game

Spy games are always a winner. Children love the element of secrecy and surprise!

This is really simple. Show the children some flashcards of ‘tricky’ words, and they whisper the words in their best ‘spy voice’ to the person sitting next to them. Simple but great fun!

2.Round The Circle

This is probably my number one ‘tricky’ word game, and if you play no other, I would definitely play this one.

The children sit in a circle. Have a pack of ‘tricky’ word cards once again.

Pass one card to the first person in the cirle. They say the word, then pass it to the next person. That person also says the word.

Keep passing the word round the circle, and everyone says it when the hold it.

Get more cards on the go at the same time. In the end you want loads of cards going round the circle.

This game has loads of advantages, including:

– It is repetitive, and you get loads of goes of saying the words

– Even if you don’t know the words, you can listen in to the person next to you and try to pick some up

– For those that know the words, it is a good game for developing your speed and fluency

3.Speed Challenge!

Having an element of speed in games is great for competitive children.

For this game you just need a timer (probably 30 seconds is good) and a pile of flashcards.

Sit the children in a circle. The idea is to turn the timer over, and they have 30 seconds to successfully pass every single word round the circle once.

4. Different Voices!

This one is like a glorified version of showing flashcards.

You show the flashcards to the children, and they say them in different voices! For example, you could say them like a ghost! Or an alien, or a zombie, or a princess.

Say a few words at a time in once voice before switching to another. This really keeps their focus and attention.

This game is also brilliant for developing early counting, and you can read about this and many other strategies in this article.

Play-Based Games To Teach Tricky Words

As well as being lots of fun adult-led games you can do, there are also games that children can play by themselves.

Here are some excellent examples that you can have a go of:

1.Secret Hunt

Children love anything to do with detectives, and top-secret missions.

The more you can get these into what you do the better.

In this secret hunt game, all you need is some small cards with tiny tricky words written on them. Put these are around the room. Hide them under tables, at the sides of cupboards, on chair-legs – wherever you can think of.

Then give the children some magnifying glasses. They are the top-secret detectives!

They simply go round the room, try to find the mini-words, and try to read them. Hours of fun!

2. Board Game

This is really simple to set up. You make a board game that will look something like this:

You could use a snake, or a rocket, or caterpillar – anything like that which you can split into sections and put words on.

Select a few ‘tricky’ words to go on the sections. It is good to target the words you are trying to learn at that time. You could have anything from about two words, to perhaps six or seven.

This is a good game from anywhere between 2 to 6 children.

Each child playing has some kind of counter. It could be a differently colored lego piece each, for example.

They put these at one end of the board.

Now the first child rolls the dice, and goes that number of steps up the board. They try to say the ‘tricky’ word that they land on.

Then the next child goes, and so on. The winner is the child that gets to the end first.

3. Snap!

This is like the classic card game.

All you need for this is pile of lots of tricky word cards. You could have two players, or you could have a few more (maybe four might be the sensible limit for this game).

Split the tricky words between the players, and then one person puts down a card first in the middle of the table (and says the word). Then another player puts their card down, and says that one.

Just like normal snap, whenever two cards match shout ‘snap!’ and put your hand on the deck. Whoever puts their hand on them first wins all the cards. The winner of the game is the person that ends up with all the cards (or most if you have to finish in an agreed time).

If you like the sound of some of these games that I’ve listed here, then I’ve written an even more in-depth article about the 12 best ‘tricky’ word games that you can read here.

Common Mistakes (And How To Resolve Them)

There are quite a few issues that will crop up when you try to teach tricky words, and there are different things you can do to address these things.

Some of these include:

Children Try To Sound Them Out

This is the most common problem you will encounter. Children get used to the process of sounding out each when they read a sentence, and continue this process even when there is a tricky word in it.

You will often find that many children will know multiple tricky words when read in isolation, but put them into a sentence, and the child will not recognize them at all, or at least try to sound them out first .

The key to this really is practice. There is no easy way round it. Some children will just ‘spot’ the tricky words they know much quicker, and some will take longer.

The more you can develop their sight-speed fluency, the quicker they will transition to sounding out some words, and recognizing others.

They Cannot Remember Them

Some children find ‘tricky’ words much harder than phonetic words. It is, for them, a much harder skill to recognize a whole word, as opposed to just a phoneme.

The thing here is to make it multi-sensory. The more action, dance, movement, and song you can get into the teaching of ‘tricky’ words the better. This activates many more parts of the children’s brains, and gets them much more strongly engaged.

You could also thinkn about playing memory games, such as the 22 fantastic ideas that I wrote about in this article.

They Don’t Use Them In Writing

Some children will learn to be able to read the ‘tricky’ words just fine. They may even be spotting and reading them in sentences.

However, these same children may just write completely phonetically.

For example, they write ‘too’ instead of ‘to’, ‘mee’ instead of ‘me’, and ‘thai’ instead of ‘they.’

Again, this is normal, and just a process that they go through. The more practise they have of writing tricky words in isolation, the more chance they will have of recognizing when a word is ‘tricky’ when they are writing.

Top Tips For Teaching Tricky Words

  • Teach them in order
  • Start when children are at least beginning to blend, and know lots of phonemes
  • Practise them daily
  • Use fun games and bring the process to life!
  • Practise and apply the skill in different contexts

Conclusion

‘Tricky’ words are not hard, I promise you! They just can’t be sounded out.

Making them fun is the big challenge, and lots of good-quality practise will get children confidently reading these words.

If you’ve found this article useful, then check out one of these…

  • Ten Terrific Alliteration Activities
  • Phoneme Frames – What They Are And How To Use them

sei

1.

1) decir

2) decir

3) decir

4) decir

2.

opinión, voz y voto


— have
— I wouldn’t say no to
— let’s say
— say
— say the word
— that is to say

I didn’t hear him, what did he say? no lo he oído, ¿qué ha dicho?

how do you say «laugh» in Spanish? ¿cómo se dice «laugh» en español?

tr[seɪ]

what did he say? ¿qué dijo?, ¿qué ha dicho?

could you say that again? ¿podrías repetir eso?

I thought you said you could cook! ¡no habías dicho que sabías cocinar!

she said to be here at 9.00 pm dijo que teníamos que estar aquí a las 9.00

2 (prayer) rezar; (poem, lines) recitar

3 (newspaper, sign, etc) decir; (clock, meter, etc) marcar

what does the guidebook say? ¿qué dice la guía?, ¿qué pone en la guía?

what time does your watch say? ¿qué hora marca tu reloj?

4 (think) pensar, opinar, decir

what do you say? ¿qué opinas?

what do you say we have a break? ¿qué te parece si hacemos un descanso?

what would you say to an ice-cream? ¿te apetece un helado?

say you found a wallet, what would you do? supongamos que encuentras una cartera, ¿qué harías?

come round at, say, 8.00pm pásate hacia las 8.00, ¿te parece?

shall we say Saturday then? ¿quedamos el sábado, pues?

1 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL familiar ¡oye!, ¡oiga!

SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL

having said that… a pesar de eso…, no obstante…

I’ll say! ¡ya lo creo!

it goes without saying that… por supuesto que…, huelga decir que…

it is said that… dicen que…, se dice que…

not to say… por no decir…

not to say much for somebody/something decir mal de alguien/algo

say when! ¡ya me dirás basta!

to say a lot for somebody/something decir mucho en favor de alguien/algo

to say nothing of… por no decir nada de…, por no mencionar…

you can say that again! ¡y que lo digas!, ¡ya lo creo!

you don’t say! ¡no me digas!

you said it! ¡ya lo creo!; ¡dímelo a mí!

decir, expresar

marcar, poner

decir

decir

n.

v.

pret: dij-

I
1. seɪ

(pres says sez; past & past p said sed) transitive verb

1) (utter, express in speech) <<word/sentence/mass>> decir*; <<prayer>> rezar*

I said yes/no — dije que sí/no

he said yes/no to my proposal — aceptó/rechazó mi propuesta

go away, she said — -vete- dijo

well, what can I say? — ¿y qué quieres que te diga?

it was, how o what shall I say, a tricky situation — fue, cómo te (lo) diría, una situación delicada

if you disagree, say so — si no está de acuerdo, dígalo

it doesn’t say much for… — no dice mucho de…

the less said about it, the better — cuanto menos se hable del asunto, mejor

it goes without saying that… — huelga decir que…, ni que decir tiene que…, por supuesto que…

2)

it said in the paper that… — el periódico decía or ponía que…

b) <<watch/dial>> marcar*

3)

a) ( suppose) (colloq) suponer*, poner*

(let’s) say that… — supongamos or pongamos que…

4)

he’s been ill, or so he says — ha estado enfermo, al menos eso es lo que dice

to be said to + INF: she’s said to be very mean/strict — dicen que es muy tacaña/severa

b) (decide, pronounce) decir*

what do o would you say to a cup of tea — ¿quieres or (esp Esp) te apetece una taza de té?, ¿qué te parece si nos tomamos un té?

2.

who says o says who? — (colloq) ¿quién lo dice?

II

say, that’s a great idea! — oye, qué buena idea! (fam)

say, buddy — eh, amigo!

III

say (IN something): I have no say in the matter yo no tengo ni voz ni voto en el asunto; to have the final say (in something) — tener* la última palabra (en algo)

[seɪ]
(

vb

:

pt

,

pp

said)

VI

1) decir

«hello,» he said — -hola -dijo

he said to me that… — me dijo que…

to say to o.s. — decir para sí

say after me — repite lo que digo yo

to say goodbye to sb — despedirse de algn

to say good morning/ goodnight to sb — dar los buenos días/las buenas noches a algn

I’ve nothing more to say — se acabó

I must say (that) I disapprove of the idea — la verdad es que no me parece bien la idea

it’s difficult, I must say — es difícil, lo confieso

that’s what I say — eso digo yo, lo mismo digo yo

I will say this about him, he’s bright — reconozco (a pesar de todo) que es listo

2) marcar; poner, decir

the rules say that… — según las reglas…, en las reglas pone…

when all is said and done — al fin y al cabo, a fin de cuentas

she has nothing to say for herself — no tiene conversación, nunca abre la boca

say what you like about her hat, she’s charming — dígase lo que se quiera acerca de su sombrero, es encantadora

there’s no saying what he’ll do — quién sabe lo que hará

I’d rather not say — prefiero no decir (nada)

it’s an original, not to say revolutionary, idea — la idea es original y hasta revolucionaria

to say nothing of the rest — sin hablar de lo demás

would you really say so? — ¿lo crees de veras?

that is to say — o sea, es decir

what do or would you say to a walk? — ¿le apetece or se le antoja un paseo?

it goes without saying that… — ni que decir tiene que…, huelga decir que…

it is said that…, they say that… — se dice que…, dicen que…

it’s easier said than done — del dicho al hecho hay gran trecho

there’s a lot to be said for it/for doing it — hay mucho que decir a su favor/a favor de hacerlo

it must be said that… — hay que decir or reconocer que…

there’s something to be said for it/for doing it — hay algo que decir a su favor/a favor de hacerlo

no sooner said than done — dicho y hecho

you don’t say! * — ¡no me digas!

I say! — ¡oiga!; ¡vaya!, ¡anda!

say no more! — ¡basta!, ¡ni una palabra más!

so you say! — ¡eso es lo que tú dices!

well said! — ¡muy bien dicho!

you’ve said it! * — ¡exacto!, ¡tú lo dijiste!

6) suponer, decir, poner

(let’s) say it’s worth £20 — supongamos or digamos or pon que vale 20 libras

I should say it’s worth about £100 — yo diría que vale unas cien libras

shall we say £5? — ¿convenimos en 5 libras?

we sell it at say £25 — pongamos que lo vendemos por 25 libras

2.

N

to have one’s say — dar su opinión

* * *

I
1. [seɪ]

(pres says [sez]; past & past p said [sed]) transitive verb

1) (utter, express in speech) <<word/sentence/mass>> decir*; <<prayer>> rezar*

I said yes/no — dije que sí/no

he said yes/no to my proposal — aceptó/rechazó mi propuesta

go away, she said — -vete- dijo

well, what can I say? — ¿y qué quieres que te diga?

it was, how o what shall I say, a tricky situation — fue, cómo te (lo) diría, una situación delicada

if you disagree, say so — si no está de acuerdo, dígalo

it doesn’t say much for… — no dice mucho de…

the less said about it, the better — cuanto menos se hable del asunto, mejor

it goes without saying that… — huelga decir que…, ni que decir tiene que…, por supuesto que…

2)

it said in the paper that… — el periódico decía or ponía que…

b) <<watch/dial>> marcar*

3)

a) ( suppose) (colloq) suponer*, poner*

(let’s) say that… — supongamos or pongamos que…

4)

he’s been ill, or so he says — ha estado enfermo, al menos eso es lo que dice

to be said to + INF: she’s said to be very mean/strict — dicen que es muy tacaña/severa

b) (decide, pronounce) decir*

what do o would you say to a cup of tea — ¿quieres or (esp Esp) te apetece una taza de té?, ¿qué te parece si nos tomamos un té?

2.

who says o says who? — (colloq) ¿quién lo dice?

II

say, that’s a great idea! — oye, qué buena idea! (fam)

say, buddy — eh, amigo!

III

say (IN something): I have no say in the matter yo no tengo ni voz ni voto en el asunto; to have the final say (in something) — tener* la última palabra (en algo)

сложный, хитрый, каверзный, мудреный, запутанный, ловкий, искусный, находчивый

прилагательное

- хитрый, коварный; ловкий; искусный

tricky politician — ловкий политикан
tricky acrobat — искусный акробат
as tricky as a monkey — проказливый; хитрый; зловредный
tricky opponent — коварный противник
he is a tricky customer — он пройдоха /проныра, ловкач/, с ним надо держать ухо востро

- хитрый, коварный, каверзный (о поступках и т. п.)

tricky question — каверзный вопрос

- щекотливый

a tricky situation — щекотливая /деликатная/ ситуация

- ненадёжный; коварный

tricky brake — ненадёжный тормоз
the ice on the river was tricky and uncertain — лёд на реке был коварный и ненадёжный

- мудрёный, хитрый

tricky lock — «хитрый» /мудрёный/ замок; замок с секретом

- сложный, запутанный; трудный

tricky problem (in mathematics) — сложная (математическая) задача
tricky argument — путаный довод
that’s a tricky job — эта работа требует сноровки

Мои примеры

Словосочетания

a tricky musical passage for the woodwind section — сложный музыкальный отрывок для секции деревянных духовых инструментов  
pointed / tricky question — каверзный вопрос  
sticky / thorny / ticklish / tricky question — сложный, щекотливый вопрос  
tricky Vicky — разг. коварная соблазнительница  
tricky partner — ненадёжный партнёр  
tricky situation — сложная ситуация; зыбкое положение  
ice on the river was tricky and uncertain — лед на реке был коварный и ненадёжный  
tricky coding — хитроумное программирование; «хитроумное» кодирование  
tricky position — зыбкое положение  
tricky problem — запутанная проблема  
tricky person — каверзница; каверзник  

Примеры с переводом

The lock is tricky to open.

Этот замок сложно открыть.

She is a tricky devil, so be careful.

Она — хитрая чертовка, так что будьте осторожны.

It can be tricky at first, but persevere.

Поначалу, наверное, будет сложно, но всё равно нужно продолжать.

She handled that tricky situation like an old pro.

Она разрешила эту непростую ситуацию, как видавший виды профессионал.

I can get you tickets for the show but it’ll be tricky.

Я могу достать вам билеты на этот спектакль, но будет непросто.

That was a tricky ball he served to me, there was no hope of returning it.

Он сделал очень хитрую подачу, не было практически никаких шансов отбить её.

This is a tricky corner; we must ease the piano round, not push it.

Тут острый угол, нам надо обнести пианино, а не толкать его.

He was seen by a shepherd, gamely negotiating a particularly tricky section of the mountain road to San Doloroso.

Некий пастух видел его, когда тот бодро пробирался по особенно коварному участку горной тропы, ведущей в Сан-Долоросо.

Примеры, ожидающие перевода

Hanging a door is quite a tricky job.

Для того чтобы добавить вариант перевода, кликните по иконке , напротив примера.

Возможные однокоренные слова

trick  — трюк, хитрость, уловка, фокус, обманывать, сложный, обманчивый
trickiness  — ловкость, хитрость, умение обмануть, обвести вокруг пальца
trickish  — хитрый, способный на обман,

Формы слова

adjective
срав. степ. (comparative): trickier
прев. степ. (superlative): trickiest

1) Is her cat hurt? a) yes b) no 2) Is her hat red? a) yes b) no 3) Is her fur hot? a) yes b) no 4) Will her cow cook? a) no b) yes 5) Will her mum hug her? a) yes b) no

Leaderboard

This leaderboard is currently private. Click Share to make it public.
This leaderboard has been disabled by the resource owner.
This leaderboard is disabled as your options are different to the resource owner.

Gameshow quiz is an open-ended template. It does not generate scores for a leaderboard.

Log in required

Options

Switch template

Interactives

More formats will appear as you play the activity.

Понравилась статья? Поделить с друзьями:
  • Is hello an english word
  • Is goodness a word
  • Is incapable a word
  • Is hell a swear word
  • Is inbox a word