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Adjective Hunt

How to Play Adjective Hunt with Your Child at Home

Adjective Hunt is a simple home game where your child searches for and names describing words on everyday objects — soft, shiny, bumpy, tiny. Start with one room and two or three words, model first, take turns, and keep it short and joyful to grow vocabulary and expressive language.

How to Play Adjective Hunt with Your Child at Home
Adjective Hunt: A Simple Home Game for Big Vocabulary Wins — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Describing words are everywhere — and turning your home into a treasure map for them is one of the simplest ways to grow your child's spoken language.

In short

Adjective Hunt is a playful home activity where your child searches for and names describing words — soft, shiny, bumpy, tiny — attached to everyday objects around them. It builds vocabulary, sharpens observation, and gives children richer ways to express what they see and feel. You need no special kit, just a few minutes and your everyday surroundings.

How to play Adjective Hunt at home

Set it up simply
  • Pick one room or one basket of toys to start — keep the field small so your child isn't overwhelmed.
  • Choose two or three describing words to "hunt" today, such as soft, hard and colourful.
  • Model first: "I found something soft — this teddy! Can you find something soft too?"

Make it active

  • Let your child touch, hold and explore each object as they name its quality — "The pillow is squishy!"
  • Use opposites to deepen understanding — big and small, rough and smooth, bright and dull.
  • Take turns: you find one, then they find one. Turn-taking keeps it conversational.

Stretch gently over time

  • Add senses — "Find something that smells nice," "Find something cold."
  • Combine two words — "a small, red ball."
  • Praise the trying, not just the right answer; every describing word your child reaches for is a win.

Keep sessions short and joyful — five to ten minutes is plenty. End while it's still fun so your child looks forward to the next hunt.

When to look a little closer

If your child rarely uses describing words by around 3 years, finds it hard to combine two words together, or seems to understand far more than they can say, it's worth a gentle developmental check — not a cause for worry, just a chance to support language while it's growing fastest. Children develop language at different paces, and early support is always easier than later catch-up.

The Pinnacle way

Adjective Hunt is one of many language-building activities our therapists weave into speech therapy at home and in centre. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — learn how this clinician-administered structured assessment works at the AbilityScore® explainer.

Trusted sources

Aligned with guidance from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on building toddler and preschool vocabulary, and the American Academy of Pediatrics' HealthyChildren resources on language-rich everyday play.

Next step — try one Adjective Hunt today, and if you'd like tailored language activities for your child, book a developmental assessment with Pinnacle Blooms Network on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to watch

If your child rarely uses describing words by around age 3, struggles to combine two words, or understands far more than they can say, consider a gentle developmental check to support language early.

Try this at home

Sprinkle describing words into routines — 'the warm towel', 'the bumpy road' — so your child hears rich language all day, not just at game time.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

What age is Adjective Hunt suitable for?

It works well from around 2.5 to 6 years. For younger children, start with simple, sensory words like soft and big; for older children, add senses and combine two describing words together.

How long should each Adjective Hunt session last?

Five to ten minutes is ideal. Short, frequent and fun sessions build more language than long ones. Always stop while your child is still enjoying it.

What if my child gives the wrong word?

Gently model the right one without correcting harshly — 'That's a good try! This one feels soft, doesn't it?' Praising the effort keeps your child confident and willing to keep trying.

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