Egg
Posted on 10/04/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 10th — 16th April 2023 is Egg.
Cake
Posted on 03/04/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 3rd — 9th April 2023 is Cake.
Fast
Posted on 27/03/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 27th March — 2nd April 2023 is Fast.
Red
Posted on 20/03/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 20th — 26th March 2023 is Red.
Pie
Posted on 13/03/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 13th — 19th March 2023 is Pie.
Bus
Posted on 06/03/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 6th — 12th March 2023 is Bus.
Salad
Posted on 27/02/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 27th February — 5th March 2023 is Salad.
Happy
Posted on 20/02/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 20th — 26th February 2023 is Happy.
To Love
Posted on 13/02/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 13th — 19th February 2023 is To Love.
Sweet
Posted on 06/02/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 6th — 12th February 2023 is Sweet.
White
Posted on 30/01/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 30th January — 5th February 2023 is White.
Snow
Posted on 23/01/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 23rd — 29th January 2023 is Snow.
Cheese
Posted on 16/01/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 16th — 22nd January 2023 is Cheese.
Cold
Posted on 09/01/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 9th — 15th January 2023 is Cold.
Clothes
Posted on 02/01/2023
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 2nd — 8th January 2023 is Clothes.
To Dance
Posted on 26/12/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 26th December 2022 — 1st January 2023 is To Dance.
Football
Posted on 21/11/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 21st — 27th November 2022 is Football.
To Look
Posted on 14/11/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 14th — 20th November 2022 is To Look.
Soldier
Posted on 07/11/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 7th — 13th November 2022 is Soldier.
To Remember
Posted on 31/10/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 31st October — 6th November 2022 is To Remember.
Diwali
Posted on 17/10/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 17th — 23rd October 2022 is Diwali.
Calm
Posted on 10/10/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 10th — 16th October 2022 is Calm.
Moon
Posted on 03/10/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 3rd — 9th October 2022 is Moon.
Coffee
Posted on 26/09/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 26th September — 2nd October 2022 is Coffee.
Nappy
Posted on 19/09/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 19th — 25th September 2022 is Nappy.
Pencil
Posted on 12/09/2022
Learn a new word every week and be inspired to get signing. The sign for 12th — 18th September 2022 is Pencil.
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Glyph: A nonverbal symbol such as an arrow; a carved groove on a column or frieze; any computer-generated character. From Greek gluphe, a carving; imported into English around 1727 from French glyphe.
Glyph was in the news last week following the death of Prince, the musician who in 1993 changed his name to a symbol of his own design, partly in an act of defiance against his uncooperative record label, Warner Bros.
Prince’s “Love Symbol” combined the male and female symbols and a stylized horn.
Prince referred to the mark not as a glyph but as the “Love Symbol”; glyph was, at the time, an obscure word used mostly in descriptions of ancient (and especially Mayan) art. (The OED still labels the “symbol” definition of glyph “rare.”) If the average American had heard of a glyph, it was likely in a combining form such as petroglyph (a rock carving, seen in the southwestern U.S. and other places) or hieroglyph (“sacred carving,” as in the Egyptian writing system).
Glyph was popularized in the English-speaking world by popular-culture journalists. Before 1993, the New York Times citations for glyph mostly appear in the context of archeology or, occasionally, in reference to a musical work by the 20th-century composer Lou Harrison titled “The Glyph.” Glyph also appeared in industry jargon, as in a September 1966 article about airline signage:
“The country’s airlines have become glyph conscious.”
In the early 1990s, the Xerox Corporation was “engaged in a quiet research project code-named Glyph,” wrote Times technology reporter John Markoff in 1991. He noted: “Several industry executives familiar with the project said Glyph would permit a single sheet of paper to serve as both a human-readable and machine-readable document.”
The Times’s first mention of Prince’s new name appeared in a November 28, 1993, Times Style section article, “A Prince Is a Prince Is…”. Reporter Neal Karlen first called the symbol “an unpronounceable pictograph” and then, three paragraphs down, “an unpronounceable glyph.” After that, “unpronounceable glyph” became the epithet of choice for all reporters: the Times’s Jon Pareles began using it in July 1994, and it appeared frequently in obituaries and other articles about Prince’s life and death. (“Unpronounceable glyph” even appears in the 1999 Jonathan Lethem novel Motherless Brooklyn, when the narrator encounters “The Artist Formerly Known As Prince” on the cover of Vibe, with the “unpronounceable typographical glyph with which he had replaced his name” shaved into his hair at the temple. The narrator attempts to pronounce the symbol as “Skrubble” and “Plavshk.”)
The Love Symbol wasn’t just unpronounceable, it was unprintable – until Prince sent news outlets a 3.5-inch floppy disk with a custom-designed font. The disk was a collectible item even before Prince’s death.
Added to my collection: 3.5″ floppy given to press when Prince changed his name. Contains a font w/ one symbol in it. pic.twitter.com/mNL0eOHDGI
— Anil Dash ☔️ (@anildash) June 23, 2014
There’s more to the story, according to a Wired story published last week:
The Love Symbol was whipped up during a frenzied two days, was largely inspired by Carmen Electra, and was, from the beginning, about much more than business hijinks….
In 1992, Mitch Monson was working at Paisley Park, Prince’s recording compound in Chanhassen, Minnesota. The musician’s team had hired HDMG, where Monson was a partner and creative director, to create graphics for some music videos. The album still didn’t have a name, but the videos included “7,” “SexyMF,” and “My Name is Prince.” One day Prince’s head producer approached Monson and Lizz Luce to say Prince needed a symbol. She didn’t say why—Monson and Luce assumed it would decorate an album cover—but said he wanted the icon to fuse the astrologically inspired Mars-male and Venus-female symbols, and he wanted it soon.
“We just took off right away,” Monson says. The two designers toiled away until morning, sketching ideas until Prince came in and quickly selected the design now inextricably linked with his identity. After that, Monson and Luce barely altered the drawing. “The one you see now was almost untouched. We did very little adjustment to that particular mark at all,” Monson says.
Two additional glyph notes:
Since 2006, the Glyph Comics Awards have recognized the best comics of the previous year created by, for, and about people of color. The awards are named for the blog Glyphs: The Language of the Black Comics Community.
And Glyph Publishing Arts is a small design and production house in Marin County, California, with which I have worked on a couple of very satisfying book projects.
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Each week we spotlight a few of the the top dictionary lookups based on what is trending in the news, and go in-depth about their meanings, context, and origins.
The Words of the Week — Apr. 14
Lookups from fashion, social media, and politics
The Words of the Week — Apr. 7
Lookups from religion, publishing, and politics
The Words of the Week — Mar. 31
Lookups from social media, international affairs, and Florida
The Words of the Week — Mar. 24
Lookups from the weather, the courts, and politics
The Words of the Week — Mar. 17
Lookups from the law, politics, and springtime
The Words of the Week — Mar. 10
Lookups from politics, the law, and public opinion
The Words of the Week — Mar. 3
Lookups from basketball, medicine, and politics
The Words of the Week — Feb. 24
Lookups from politics, meteorology, and the weather
The Words of the Week — Feb. 17
Lookups from the worlds of railroads and automobiles, law, and from newspaper style guides
The Words of the Week — Feb. 10
Lookups from the State of the Union, the Grammys, and Turkey
The Words of the Week — Feb. 3
Lookups from cyberspace, the environment, and entertainment
The Words of the Week — Jan. 27
Lookups from politics, AI, and the family Salamandridae
The Words of the Week — Jan. 20
Lookups from Congress, Hollywood, and the Supreme Court
The Words of the Week — Jan. 13
Lookups from politics, more politics, and even more politics
The Words of the Week — Jan 6
Lookups from the weather, the royal family, and the House of Representatives
The Words of the Week — Dec. 30
Lookups from aviation, politics, and the holidays
The Words of the Week — Dec. 23
Lookups from the weather, the law, and social media
The Words of the Week — Dec. 16
Lookups from politics, social media, and crypto
The Words of the Week — Dec. 9
Lookups from American history, artificial intelligence, and the law
The Words of the Week — Dec. 2
Lookups from geology, politics, and the world of sports
The Words of the Week — Nov. 18
Lookups from Dickens, politics, and poetry
The Words of the Week — Nov. 11
Lookups from politics, cryptocurrency, and veterans
The Words of the Week — Nov. 4
Lookups from social media, publishing, and politics
The Words of the Week — Oct. 28
Lookups from Congress, elections, and product recalls
The Words of the Week — Oct. 21
Lookups from politics, education, and gaming
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So what’s all the hype about Word of the Week? It comes down to the simplicity of the idea and more importantly the huge impact it can make in expanding your students’ vocabulary as well as improving reading and writing.
Vocabulary is a critical factor in the development of reading skills and comprehension. Unfortunately, not every student comes to school with an adequate level of vocabulary knowledge to support reading success. The more words your students know, the easier it will be for them to read and understand what they have read.
As we know, reading and writing skills are closely linked and each helps improve the other. Introducing your students to challenging words through Word of the Week can help to increase your students’ confidence to use sophisticated language in their writing and begin to understand the power of words.
If Word of the Week is something that you would like to try in your classroom, read on to access our Word of the Week teaching resources and information that you need…
Word of the Week PowerPoints – Foundation Year to Year 6
We have created a Word of the Week PowerPoint for each Primary School year level. Each presentation includes teacher notes, 40 slides and activities that introduce new vocabulary. Each slide includes:
- a new word
- the definition of the word
- an example sentence, showing the word being used in context
- a question or activity for the students to discuss
- words that are similar or relate to.
The vocabulary chosen for each year group has been carefully selected by our talented team of Resource Content Producers. There is a steady progression in the difficulty of the words across the year levels and the presentations for lower years include illustrations to support comprehension.
Word of the Week Flip Books
Our new Word of the Week Flip Books are a great addition to our Word of the Day/Week Collection. They are a brilliant alternative if you have limited access to an interactive whiteboard and a great addition to a Word of the Week classroom display. There’s a flip book for each year level.
We recommend giving these flip books justice by printing them in a larger size. You can either bind the flip book or punch holes at the top and use card rings or keyrings to hang your flip book.
Word of the Week for Lower Years
For lower years, Word of the Week should be all about getting your students excited about learning new vocabulary, having fun and exploring new words through play and discussion.
Word of the Week activities for lower years should include:
- brainstorming other words that have a similar meaning
- putting the world into real-world context
- making connections between words and the lives of your students
- exploring new vocabulary through movement, drama and actions
- games
- music.
Movement, Drama and Actions.
Can you imagine the buzz in the classroom when you ask your students to show you what sort of actions a beast would make?
Here are some other examples of how you and your students can explore new vocabulary through movement and drama:
- Word of the Week: giggle – What does your giggle sound like? How is your giggle different from your friends? Can you giggle like them?
- Word of the Week: paddle – What action would you use to paddle?
- Word of the Week: dance – What is your favourite dance move? Where did you learn it?
Remember that Word of the Week is all about loving language and having fun, especially for lower years.
Word of the Week Poster
For upper years, we have created a Word of the Week Poster that includes a variety of tasks to give context and meaning to a new challenging word. It is ideal to use as a whole class vocabulary activity or as part of your English Group Activities.
The teaching resource encourages students to deconstruct the word, identify it’s meaning and to use the word in a written context. This activity works very well as an English Group Activity or a whole class activity. You can easily support less confident students by encouraging them to work with a partner.
Word of The Week Homework Activity
Word of the Week provides a great opportunity for meaningful homework activities. Here are some ideas that you might like to include as part of your homework matrix:
- Create a Word of the Week poster to illustrate it’s meaning.
- Find and cut out examples of Word of the Week found in newspapers or magazines.
- Use word of the week in a conversation with your family and explain what it means to an adult.
- Write a synonym for Word of the Week.
- Find Word of the Week in a dictionary. Record the dictionary definition.
Word of the Week Roll a Dice Activity
Rolling dice is a great way to generate six different activities related to your Word of the Week. Use our Dice Roller Widget to take this activity to the next level.
When using the Dice Roller Widget, you could either roll 1 die for the whole class or roll up to five dice to assign different tasks to different groups. Simply roll the dice and ask your students to complete the corresponding activity. For example:
Roll 1 – Write your word in a sentence.
Roll 2 – Draw a picture to express the word.
Roll 3 – Write a newspaper headline that includes the word.
Roll 4 – Write the definition of the word.
Roll 5 – Find the Scrabble score of your word.
Roll 6 – Count the number of vowels and consonants in your word.
For independent fast finisher activity, allow your students to collect a die and work through the tasks, rolling the die until all six tasks have been completed.
Word Tile Total Activity
Your kids will love building your Word of the Week with these Giant Letter Tiles. They are available to download in Giant Uppercase Letter Tiles or Giant Lowercase Letter Tiles.
Word Tile Totals
If you are looking for a more structured task why not try our Word Tile Total Activity? This teaching resource encourages students to think mathematically while developing their spelling skills. It can also be used as one of your English Groups Activities or fast finisher activity to revise and revisit challenging vocabulary from Word of the Week.
Each week, encourage the students to spell out Word of the Week using the word tiles and to calculate the word score for the word. When you have recorded ten words, challenge your students to calculate their overall word tile total!
Word of The Week Revision
Remember that children need to be exposed to new vocabulary multiple times before they understand it. A great way to do this is to use your Word of the Week and revisit it daily by using our Word of the Day Spinner.
Simply add your Word of the Week or create a list of words that your students have learned so far and press spin for instant activities. You can even customise the activities by selecting from lower, middle or upper years activities.
Spin activities for middle years include:
- using the word in a compound sentence
- writing 3 clues which would help someone to guess the word
- writing a list of synonyms for the word
- writing a list of antonyms for the word
- brainstorming a list of other words related to the word
- …and lots more!
Whole School Initiative
Be that person who is brave enough to suggest a Word of The Week whole school initiative. Just think of the huge impact that you could create and the positive difference that you could make by expanding the vocabulary of the students across all year groups.
This is one of the easiest whole school initiatives to implement because everything you need is there at the click of a download button. All you need to do is provide each year group coordinator with the Word of the Week PowerPoint and the corresponding Word of the Week Flip Book! All your colleagues need to do is commit to sharing the word of the week on Monday morning and following it up with a few fun activities.
Big Words for Little Geniuses
By Sue Patterson, James Patterson, Pan Hsinping
Ages: 4-7
Published: 4th September 2017
Hardcover available at Booktopia
eBook Edition on iBooks and Google Play, Kindle edition on Amazon
This New York Times bestselling picture book is a fun book to share with your students. For each letter of the alphabet, a sophisticated word and its definition is given. Your students will love to learn this adventurous vocabulary. You might even have some trouble reading some of these words! But hey, there presents another learning experience as you model how to sound out tricky words and decode them! Here’s one for you…
Arachibutyrophobia (Ah-RACK-ee-byoo-tee-ro-FO-bee-ya)
Arachibutyrophobia is the alarming fear of peanut butter sticking to the top of your mouth!
Research suggests that vocabulary is enormously important to children’s development and you as their teacher can make a huge impact on your students’ vocabulary knowledge. A wide knowledge of vocabulary improves all areas of communication — listening, speaking, reading and writing.
Word of the Week is a quick and easy way to make a massive difference to your students’ futures.
Don’t hesitate, just do it. Try Word of the Week in your classroom and spread the word.