ESL Vocabulary Games

Bluff

ESL Defining Words Game - Vocabulary and Speaking: Bluffing, Guessing, Defining - Group Work - Intermediate (B1-B2) - 15 minutes

In this fun defining vocabulary game, students give definitions for words and try to bluff their ability to give definitions in order to score more points. Give one team a word to define. All the students in the team who know the definition stand up. Students can also stand up if they don't know the definition to help their team score more points, but if they are chosen to define the word their team loses points. A student on the other team then selects one of the standing students to define the word. If the student's definition is correct, one point is awarded to the team for each person standing. If the student's definition is wrong, one point is deducted from the team for each person standing. Then, give the other team a word to define and so on. The game continues until all the vocabulary has been covered. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins. As a variation, instead of asking the students to define a word, you could get the students to use the target vocabulary in a sentence, ask them to spell a word, etc.
Bluff Preview
Bluff
 

Collocation Ladder

ESL Collocations Game - Vocabulary: Forming Words from Prompts, Spelling, Guessing - Group Work - Pre-intermediate (A2-B1) - 20 minutes

This vocabulary game can be used to help students practice collocations. Write the first and last word of your run-on collocations in a ladder on the board, leaving empty rungs for the words in between. Explain that each word on the ladder makes a collocation with the word next to it and that the collocations can be read up or down. Team A chooses either the top or bottom rung of the ladder. Write the first letter of the word on their chosen rung. Team A then tries to guess the word from the collocation. If a team correctly guesses the word, they score one point and play again. If Team A gets the word wrong, Team B chooses the top or bottom rung and another letter is added and so on. Example run-on collocations: express-service-charge-take-away-go-home-stay-behind. Play several rounds using other run-on collocations. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
Collocation Ladder Preview
Collocation Ladder
 

Over the Line

ESL Vocabulary Game - Vocabulary: Drawing, Matching - Group Work - Young Learners - 25 minutes

This is an imaginative vocabulary game for practicing words with students. Write target vocabulary you want the students to practice on the board. In two teams, students then make a drawing of each word on a separate piece of paper. When both teams have finished drawing, collect in the pictures and mix them up. Next, erase the target vocabulary from the board and stick up both team's pictures in a random order. Create a runway from the back of the class to the board and mark a start/finish line near the back of the class. One player from each team steps up to the line. Say one of the target words and the two players race to the board to grab a corresponding picture. The first player back over the line with the correct picture scores a point for their team. The pictures are then stuck back on the board, and the next two players step up to the line and so on. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
Over the Line Preview
Over the Line
 

People to People

ESL Parts of the Body Game - Vocabulary and Listening: Following Instructions - Pair Work - Pre-intermediate (A2) - 15 minutes

Here is a fun vocabulary game for practicing parts of the body. You will need an odd number of students to play this game. Ask all the students to find a partner. The student without a partner is the 'leader'. The leader calls out different parts of the body for the students to connect with their partner, e.g. 'hand to hand', 'knee to elbow', etc. The pairs listen and follow the leader's commands. If the leader is having problems thinking of parts of the body, feel free to get them to repeat after you. After a few commands have been called out, the leader says, "People to people." Everyone then has to find a new partner (including the leader). The odd student left out becomes the new leader and so on.
People to People Preview
People to People
 

Ships of War

ESL Vocabulary Game - Vocabulary: Revision - Group Work - Any Level - 20 minutes

Here is an engaging vocabulary game to help students revise category words. Explain that each team is a warship. Each team then chooses a name for their ship, a captain and a shooter. The captain's job is to memorize the ship's name. The shooter's job is to memorize the names of the other ships. The remaining students in each team are the ship's crew. Arrange all the captains in a circle. The ship's crew lines up behind their captain. The shooter is the last crew member in each line. Give the students a category and start the game by calling a ship's name. The captain of that ship replies with a word from the category. The crewman behind the captain then says another word from the category and so on down the line until it is the shooter's turn. The shooter then calls out the name of another ship. The captain of that ship replies with a word from the category and the process is repeated. If a captain or crew member is too slow to reply, can't think of a word, repeats a word or the shooter calls out the wrong ship, the ship is sunk and everyone from the ship joins the crew of the ship that went before them. When a ship has been sunk, change the category. The last warship left standing wins the game.
Ships of War Preview
Ships of War
 

Vocabulary Deck

ESL Vocabulary Game - Vocabulary: Forming Words from Prompts - Group Work - Any Level - 20 minutes

This ESL vocabulary game is useful for practicing categories of words. Tell the students that they are going to play a vocabulary game using a pack of playing cards. Assign each card (ace to king) with two letters and write them on the board. Choose a category, e.g. verbs. Shuffle the cards and turn the top card over. Show the card to the first team and set a time limit, e.g. five seconds. The team then races to say a category word beginning with one of the letters the card represents. If the team is able to come up with a suitable word before the time limit has been reached, they score a point. The game is then repeated with the second team and so on. The team with the highest score at the end of the game wins.
Vocabulary Deck Preview
Vocabulary Deck
 

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