![kindergarten sight word list 1234 kindergarten sight word list 1234](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/4b/1b/4f/4b1b4f453aaf4fe0fee012422ab10f41.jpg)
Automatically recognizing sight words greatly assists a child when learning to read. The same cannot be said about noun except for a select few, e.g. He derived his list using service words words that are used in all written material regardless of the subject. It is important to note that Dolch specifically excluded nouns from his sight word list. Verbs: be, saw, been, would, had & made.Pronouns: him, them, those, that, our, their & your.Once your child masters the first 75 words, proceed to the following sight words. Verbs: eat, make, want, came, saw, could, get, did, has & do.Adverbs: again, so, away, there, then, when & why.Once your child masters the first 50 words, proceed to the following sight words. Verbs: are, went, going, run, have, will & was.Prepositions: from, by, down, of, with & for.Once your child masters the first 25 words, proceed to the following 25 sight words. Verbs: come, is, am, go, like, said, look, see & can.Kindergarten sight words are mostly included in the pre-primer and primer levels, with a total of 92 sight words. the third-grade level has 41 words, making a total of 220 Dolch sight words. The first-grade level has 41 words, and the second-grade level has 46 words. Pronouns: my, this, it, I, we, me & you The pre-primer level contains 40 sight words, while the primer level has 52 words.Once a child masters these words, proceed to the next list. These 25 sight words should be learned as whole words – a child must automatically recognize them upon sight. To be consistent with our other posts, we referenced Dolch’s sight word list by part of speech, where applicable. There are no noun on our kindergarten sight words lists. We categorized our kindergarten sight words according to parts of speech, specifically adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, prepositions, pronouns and verbs. The word back is a great example as it can function as a noun (my back hurts), adverb (give it back), adjective ( back door) or even a verb ( back your car out of the drive way). In fact, many sight words have more than one meaning, which is one of the reasons why they are found so often in our language. Some words were more difficult to categorize due to their multiple meanings.