Building Vocabulary
Building Vocabulary With Your Child at Home
Build vocabulary at home by talking with your child through daily routines: narrate what you both do, add one new word onto whatever they say, read and re-read together with pointing and questions, and keep words playful through songs, games and pretend play. Use your home language, give time and choices, and keep it little and often.
Words grow best where they live — at the dinner table, in the bath, on the walk to the shop. Your home is already the richest vocabulary classroom your child will ever have.
In short
The most powerful way to build your child's vocabulary at home is to talk with them, not just to them — narrate daily life, name things you both see, and add one new word onto whatever they already say. Little and often beats long lessons: a few rich, playful exchanges across the day, woven into routines, do more than any flashcard. Below are practical activities you can start today.Activities you can do today
Narrate your day ("self-talk" and "parallel-talk")- Describe what you are doing: "I'm pouring the warm milk into your cup."
- Describe what they are doing: "You're stacking the red block on top!"
- This floods their day with words tied to real meaning.
Add one word (the "expansion" trick)
- When your child says "dog", you say "big dog!" or "dog running."
- Always stay just one step ahead of their level — this is how new words stick.
Read together, every day
- Pause and point: "Look, a spotty ladybird."
- Ask "what's that?" and "what's happening?" rather than only reading the text.
- Re-reading favourite books is brilliant — repetition builds vocabulary.
Make words playful
- Sing rhymes and songs with actions; rhyme and rhythm anchor new words.
- Play "I spy", sorting games ("find all the soft things"), and pretend play with kitchen sets or dolls.
- Cooking, bath time and the supermarket are word-rich goldmines: name colours, textures, sizes, actions.
Give time and choices
- Pause and wait expectantly after you speak — let them fill the gap.
- Offer choices that need a word: "banana or apple?"
- Resist finishing their sentences; the effort is where learning lives.
Use your home language. Children build the strongest vocabulary in the language you speak most naturally and warmly — there is no need to switch to English at home.
The Pinnacle way
If you'd like to know exactly where your child's building vocabulary sits and which words to target next, a clinician can help. Note that a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — never from an online tool or checklist. Our speech therapy team coaches families with home-friendly plans, and the AbilityScore® gives a clear, structured baseline so you can see progress over time.Trusted sources
These activities align with guidance from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) on early language stimulation, and with the American Academy of Pediatrics' healthychildren.org advice on talking, reading and playing daily to grow language.Next step — message our team on WhatsApp at +91 91001 81181 to book a developmental check and get a personalised home vocabulary plan for your child.
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
Watch for steady growth, not perfection: your child should be picking up new words over weeks and months. If words are very slow to come — few words by age 2, not joining words by age 3 — or seem to be lost, bring this to a clinician for a developmental check.
Try this at home
Pick one daily routine — bath, snack or the walk home — and make it your 'word time'. Name three things, then add one describing word to each. Same routine, new words, every day.
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
How many new words should I teach my child at once?
Don't count words — count moments. Aim for rich, repeated exposure to a few words tied to things your child cares about, rather than drilling lists. The same word heard many times across different situations sticks far better than ten words heard once.
Will using two languages at home confuse my child?
No. Children's brains handle more than one language comfortably, and bilingual children build strong vocabularies in both over time. Speak the language you are warmest and most natural in — that gives your child the richest, most meaningful words.
My child understands words but doesn't say many. Is that a problem?
Understanding usually comes before talking, so a gap is common and often fine. Keep giving time and choices that invite a word. If spoken words stay very limited past the expected ages, or you have a persistent worry, a clinician can reassure you or guide next steps.
Are flashcards or screen apps good for vocabulary?
Real-life, back-and-forth conversation beats screens and flashcards for young children, because words learned in context with a caring adult are remembered best. Use everyday routines, books and play as your main tools.