ESL Hangman Games

Consonant Hangman

ESL Hangman Game - Vocabulary and Spelling: Guessing, Forming Words from Prompts - Group Work - Any Level - 15 minutes

This hangman game helps to introduce or revise vocabulary. Draw a blank for each letter in the word you wish to introduce or review on the board. Teams then take it in turns to choose a consonant. If the consonant is in the word, the team scores one point. The team can then buy a vowel for one point and guess the word, or save the point to be used again later in the game. Correct vowels do not earn points. If a consonant isn't in the word or a team saves a point, play passes to the next team. If a team has points they haven't used, they can use them only after correctly guessing a consonant. The first team to guess the word wins. Play several rounds to find the overall winning team.
Consonant Hangman Preview
Consonant Hangman
 

Dice of Fortune

ESL Hangman Game - Vocabulary and Spelling: Guessing, Forming Words or Sentences from Prompts - Group Work - Any Level - 20 minutes

In this fun hangman game, students guess letters in words, phrases or sentences and then roll a dice to try to win points. Draw the six sides of a dice on the board. Assign the following value to each number: 1 = 10 points, 2 = 20 points, 3 = 30 points, 4 = Bankrupt, 5 = Lose a turn, and 6 = 100 points. Draw a hangman style clue on the board. The clue can be a word, phrase or complete sentence. The first team chooses a letter and then rolls the dice. If you can, use an oversized dice, the bigger the better. If the letter appears in the clue, the team scores the assigned value for every occurrence of the letter. If the letter doesn't appear in the clue, play passes to the next team and no value is assigned. When a hangman clue has been correctly guessed, the points scored by each team are safe and can't be rubbed out if bankrupt. Play several rounds. The team with the highest score at the end of the game is the winner.
Dice of Fortune Preview
Dice of Fortune
 

Last Man Standing

ESL Hangman Game - Vocabulary and Spelling: Guessing, Forming Words from Prompts - Group Work - Any Level - 25 minutes

In this engaging hangman game, students guess film titles, idioms, slogans, famous people and places from hangman clues. Write the letters of the alphabet on the board. Then, think of a film title, idiom, slogan, famous person or place and write the hangman clues on the board. Each team starts with 50 points. Read the clue to the class. Teams then take it in turns to choose a letter from the board. If a team chooses a consonant that's in one of the words, they score 20 points for each occurrence of the letter. If a team chooses a vowel, they lose 10 points. A correct answer is worth 50 points. If a team gives a wrong answer, they lose 50 points. Play several rounds. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
Last Man Standing Preview
Last Man Standing
 

Letter by Letter Hangman

ESL Hangman Game - Vocabulary and Spelling: Guessing, Forming Sentences from Prompts - Group Work - Any Level - 20 minutes

In this hangman game, teams guess the letters of a sentence in order and get one guess at each letter. Draw a line for each letter in your chosen sentence. Separate the words with a slash. Write the first letter of the first word on the board. Ask the first team to guess what letter comes next. If the team guesses the correct letter, write it in the space and ask the other team for the next letter. If the team guesses incorrectly, draw the first part of the hangman for that team and ask the other team what letter they think comes next. If the other team gets the letter wrong, draw the first part of the hangman for their team. Then, write the correct letter in the space and move on to the next letter. Continue until the whole sentence is complete. The team with the least complete hangman wins the round and scores one point. If a team’s hangman is completed, they lose the round and a point is awarded to the other team. Play several rounds. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
Letter by Letter Hangman Preview
Letter by Letter Hangman
 

Parts of Speech Hangman

ESL Hangman Game - Grammar and Vocabulary: Guessing, Forming Sentences from Prompts - Group Work - Intermediate (B1) - 15 minutes

This version of hangman is ideal for practicing parts of speech, sentence structure and grammar. Think of a sentence containing the language point you wish to introduce or revise, e.g. 'He ran really fast'. Draw a line on the board for each word in the sentence and number each line. The first team chooses a number. Give the team a clue for the word, e.g. 'It's a verb'. The team then guesses the missing word. If the team correctly guesses the word, they score one point and the word is written in the space. If not, the next team can ask for a second clue or choose another number. If they ask for the same number again, you give another clue, e.g. 'The verb is in the past simple tense.' After the sentence has been guessed correctly, you may go on to focus on the language point illustrated in the sentence. Then, repeat the game with other examples of the language point. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
Parts of Speech Hangman Preview
Parts of Speech Hangman
 

Scrambled Hangman

ESL Hangman Game - Vocabulary and Spelling: Guessing, Unscrambling - Group Work - Any Level - 20 minutes

In this ESL hangman game, students guess words by unscrambling letters. Draw a line on the board for each letter of the word you have chosen. Teams take it in turns to choose a letter. If the letter is in the word, write the letter in a different place to where it should go. If a letter isn't in the word, play passes to the next team. Once all the letters of the word are revealed, teams race to unscramble the word. The first team to guess the word scores a point. Play several rounds. The team with the highest score at the end of the game is the winner. The word can be guessed before all the letters are revealed. However, this is normally very hard to do. You may also wish to base the words on a theme or category to help the students guess the words.
Scrambled Hangman Preview
Scrambled Hangman
 

Sentence Hangman

ESL Hangman Game - Grammar, Vocabulary and Spelling: Guessing, Forming Words and Sentences from Prompts - Group Work - Any Level - 20 minutes

This hangman game is useful for practicing parts of speech, sentence structure and grammar. Draw a line for each letter in the sentence, separating the words with a slash. Teams then take turns guessing either individual letters or complete words. If a team correctly guesses a letter, they score a point for each occurrence of the letter in the complete sentence. If a team correctly guesses a word, they score the total number of letters in the word. This includes any previously entered letters. When a team correctly guesses a letter or word, they have another turn. If a letter or word isn't in the sentence, play passes to the next team. Play several rounds. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
Sentence Hangman Preview
Sentence Hangman
 

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