Consult Dictionaries to Check Spellings
Help Questions
3rd Grade Writing › Consult Dictionaries to Check Spellings
Guide words: cap...cat. Which word is on this page?
cab
car
can
dog
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires guide word use using dictionary skills. Dictionaries are organized alphabetically - words are in ABC order from A to Z. For guide words: Top of each page shows first and last word on that page; your word must fall between them alphabetically. In this question we need to find which word falls between the guide words 'cap' and 'cat' by checking alphabetically. Choice A 'car' is correct because it falls between the guide words alphabetically - 'car' comes after 'cap' and before 'cat' in alphabetical order. Choice B 'cab' is incorrect because it falls outside the guide word range - 'cab' comes before 'cap' alphabetically. To help students: For guide words, teach that your word must come after first guide word and before second guide word alphabetically. Practice comparing words letter by letter: cap, car, cat shows how 'car' fits perfectly between the guide words.
Which word comes first in the dictionary: ship or shoe?
shoe
They are the same word.
ship
You cannot tell without a picture.
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires alphabetical order using dictionary skills. Dictionaries are organized alphabetically - words are in ABC order from A to Z. For alphabetical order: Compare letters from left to right - first letter, then second, then third. In this question we need to put words in ABC order by comparing first letters then second letters. Choice B is correct because it follows alphabetical order properly: 'ship' comes before 'shoe' since at the third letter, i comes before o. Choice A is incorrect because it doesn't follow ABC order, placing 'shoe' before 'ship' even though o comes after i. This error happens when students only look at first letter. To help students: Teach alphabetical order in steps: (1) First letter determines order. (2) If first letter same, use second letter. (3) If first two same, use third letter. Practice with real beginning dictionaries. Watch for: stopping at first letter only or not checking guide words.
Which word comes first in the dictionary: cap or car?
They come after cat.
You check only the first letter.
car
cap
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires alphabetical order using dictionary skills. Dictionaries are organized alphabetically - words are in ABC order from A to Z. For alphabetical order: Compare letters from left to right - first letter, then second, then third. In this question we need to determine which word comes first alphabetically between 'cap' and 'car'. Choice B 'cap' is correct because it follows alphabetical order properly - when comparing 'cap' and 'car', both start with 'ca', but the third letter 'p' in 'cap' comes before 'r' in 'car'. Choice A 'car' is incorrect because it doesn't follow ABC order - 'r' comes after 'p' in the alphabet. To help students: Teach alphabetical order in steps: (1) First letter determines order. (2) If first letter same, use second letter. (3) If first two same, use third letter. Show how to compare letter by letter when words share beginnings.
You wrote frend. Look it up. What is the correct spelling?
freind
frand
friend
frennd
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires looking up a misspelled word to find the correct spelling. Dictionaries show the correct spelling of words as the main entry word (usually in bold), allowing students to verify their spelling. In this question, we need to look up the misspelled 'frend' to find the correct spelling. Choice B (friend) is correct because this is the standard dictionary spelling of the word - it follows the 'i before e' rule and includes the silent 'i' that makes the long 'e' sound. Choice A (freind) is incorrect because it reverses the 'ie' combination - this is a common error when students misapply the 'i before e' rule. To help students: Teach the spelling check process: (1) Sound out the word to estimate the first few letters, (2) Turn to that section in the dictionary, (3) Use guide words to find the right page, (4) Scan for words that sound similar, (5) Compare your spelling to the dictionary entry. Practice with commonly misspelled words like 'friend', 'because', and 'their'.
Guide words: ball ... cat. Which word is on this page?
bat
dog
apple
zebra
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires guide word use to locate words using dictionary skills. Dictionaries are organized alphabetically - words are in ABC order from A to Z. For guide words, the top of each page shows the first and last word on that page; your word must fall between them alphabetically. In this question we need to find which word falls between the guide words 'ball' and 'cat' by checking alphabetically. Choice C is correct because 'bat' falls between the guide words alphabetically; it comes after 'ball' (l before t in the third letter) and before 'cat' (b before c). Choice A is incorrect because 'apple' falls before 'ball' alphabetically (a before b). This error happens when students don't check if the word falls between guide words. To help students: Teach that your word must come after the first guide word and before the second guide word alphabetically. Practice with real beginning dictionaries and watch for not checking guide words.
Put these words in alphabetical order: dog, cat, ant, bat.
ant, cat, bat, dog
bat, ant, dog, cat
ant, bat, cat, dog
dog, cat, bat, ant
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires arranging multiple words in alphabetical order as they would appear in a dictionary. Dictionaries organize words alphabetically by comparing first letters, then second letters if needed, then third, and so on. In this question, we need to arrange 'dog', 'cat', 'ant', and 'bat' in alphabetical order. Choice A (ant, bat, cat, dog) is correct because it follows proper alphabetical sequence - 'a' comes before 'b', 'b' comes before 'c', and 'c' comes before 'd'. Choice C (bat, ant, dog, cat) is incorrect because it doesn't follow alphabetical order - 'ant' should come before 'bat' since 'a' comes before 'b' in the alphabet. To help students: Create a systematic approach: (1) Look at the first letter of each word, (2) Arrange by first letter (a, b, c, d...), (3) If any words share the same first letter, compare their second letters. Use alphabet strips or charts as visual aids, and practice with word sorting activities using index cards.
Put these words in alphabetical order: bat, bag, ball, back.
bat, ball, bag, back
ball, bag, bat, back
bag, back, ball, bat
back, bag, ball, bat
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires alphabetical order using dictionary skills. Dictionaries are organized alphabetically - words are in ABC order from A to Z. For alphabetical order: Compare letters from left to right - first letter, then second, then third. In this question we need to put words in ABC order by comparing first letters then second letters. Choice B is correct because it follows alphabetical order properly: 'back' (third letter c), then 'bag' (g), 'ball' (l), 'bat' (t). Choice A is incorrect because it doesn't follow ABC order, placing 'bag' before 'back' even though g comes after c. This error happens when students only look at first letter. To help students: Teach alphabetical order in steps: (1) First letter determines order. (2) If first letter same, use second letter. (3) If first two same, use third letter. Practice with real beginning dictionaries. Watch for: stopping at first letter only or not checking guide words.
Which word comes first in the dictionary: ball or bat?
You cannot tell without a dictionary.
ball
bat
They are the same place.
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires alphabetical order using dictionary skills. Dictionaries are organized alphabetically - words are in ABC order from A to Z. For alphabetical order: Compare letters from left to right - first letter, then second, then third. In this question we need to determine which word comes first alphabetically between 'ball' and 'bat'. Choice B 'ball' is correct because it follows alphabetical order properly - when comparing 'ball' and 'bat', both start with 'ba', but the third letter 'l' in 'ball' comes before 't' in 'bat'. Choice A 'bat' is incorrect because it doesn't follow ABC order - 't' comes after 'l' in the alphabet. To help students: Teach alphabetical order in steps: (1) First letter determines order. (2) If first letter same, use second letter. (3) If first two same, use third letter. Practice with word pairs that share beginning letters to build this skill.
You're not sure: becuz or because. Which is correct?
because
becase
beacause
becuz
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires using a dictionary to verify the correct spelling when unsure between two options. Dictionaries provide authoritative spellings that help students confirm the correct form of words they're uncertain about. In this question, we need to determine whether 'becuz' or 'because' is the correct spelling. Choice C (because) is correct because this is the standard dictionary spelling - it includes all the necessary letters to represent the sounds in the word, even though some letters like the 'a' and 'e' might seem unnecessary phonetically. Choice B (becuz) is incorrect because it's a phonetic spelling that doesn't match the conventional dictionary spelling - while it represents how the word sounds, dictionaries show the accepted standard spelling. To help students: Emphasize that English spelling isn't always phonetic - many words have silent letters or unusual letter combinations. Teach students to check dictionaries when unsure, especially for common words that don't follow typical spelling patterns. Create a personal spelling list of frequently misspelled words.
Guide words: cap...car. Which word is on this page?
cat
can
cape
cup
Explanation
This question tests using dictionaries and reference materials to check spellings (CCSS.L.3.2.g). The task requires using guide words to determine which word appears on a dictionary page. Guide words show the first and last words on a dictionary page - any word that falls alphabetically between them will be on that page. In this question, we need to find which word falls between 'cap' and 'car' alphabetically. Choice D (cape) is correct because it comes after 'cap' and before 'car' in alphabetical order - when comparing 'cape' to 'cap', the first three letters are the same (c-a-p), but 'cape' has an 'e' which makes it come after 'cap'; when comparing 'cape' to 'car', after 'c-a', 'cape' has 'p' which comes before 'r' in the alphabet. Choice A (cat) is incorrect because it comes after 'car' alphabetically - the third letter 't' comes after 'r'. To help students: Teach that guide words create a range - your word must fall alphabetically between them. Practice by having students check each choice: Does it come after the first guide word? Does it come before the second guide word? Only if both answers are 'yes' is the word on that page.