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Cheerful fruit crates and bright labels make Fruit Names an inviting vocabulary playground where children learn to recognize common fruits and say their names with confidence through short, interactive scenes. How to play is simple and guided: tap a fruit card to hear its name spoken clearly, drag it to the matching basket or silhouette, and complete mini-activities that reinforce meaning—sorting fruits by color or size, pairing slices to whole fruits, or placing items where they make sense in a picnic layout; a picture glossary lets kids revisit new words at any time, and a friendly narrator celebrates correct matches with a calm “well done” rather than noisy fanfare. Strategy for caregivers is about repetition with variety: group new words in sets of three to five (apple, banana, grape; orange, pear, lemon) and rotate sets each session so recall grows without fatigue; encourage kids to repeat the name after the narrator, then ask a quick “which is round?” or “which one is yellow?” to connect vocabulary to attributes. Practical tips: enable the outline hint for early rounds so children see shape cues, then fade hints as confidence grows; slow the narration speed in settings for new learners or multilingual households; and use the review page at the end of a session to revisit tricky pairs like lime/lemon or peach/apricot, showing subtle differences in color and leaf shape. Short quizzes mix in gentle challenge—find the fruit that belongs in a smoothie, choose the fruit that grows in a bunch—and errors trigger a subtle nudge rather than a buzzer, keeping attention soft and encouraging exploration. As kids progress, scenes add farmer’s market stalls, orchard rows, and kitchen counters where simple steps like washing and slicing become sequencing mini-games that double as language practice: “first wash, then slice, then share.” Accessibility features include large touch targets, color-independent icons next to labels, optional text-to-speech for every interface element, and a reduced-motion mode that keeps focus on the artwork. What makes Fruit Names enjoyable is its clarity: the art is readable on small screens, the words are spoken at a natural pace, and the activities feel like helping in a friendly kitchen rather than taking a test; after a few sessions children start pointing out favorites in real life, and that bridge between screen and table is the best sign the vocabulary is sticking—learning, gently reinforced by doing.
Click on the image that corresponds to the name of the fruit
So many more games you can play!
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