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Match the homonyms

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Free printable match the homonyms worksheet for kindergarten students. Part of our multiple meaning words collection. Aligned to Common Core standards.

How do I use this worksheet?

Begin with a shared reading or oral warm-up that highlights multiple meaning words so students hear and see the skill in context before practicing it independently. As students work through the worksheet, encourage them to say answers aloud first and then write them, especially for phonics-based tasks. After completing the worksheet, use one or two examples from the page to start a discussion: "Where else have you seen this in your reading?" These multiple meaning words worksheets are ideal for use during small group reading time, as independent center work, or as a homework activity.

What students will practice

  • Students will identify and apply multiple meaning words knowledge to decode and comprehend grade-level text.
  • Students will recognize patterns and rules related to multiple meaning words in spoken and written language.
  • Students will build fluency and confidence with multiple meaning words through guided and independent practice.

Curriculum Links

Common Core State Standards

Reading: Foundational Skills · Kindergarten

RF.K.3

Standard: Know and apply grade-level phonics and word analysis skills in decoding words.

View all RF.K.3 worksheets →

FAQ

How do I use this multiple meaning words worksheet?

Begin with a shared reading or oral warm-up that highlights multiple meaning words so students hear and see the skill in context before practicing it independently. As students work through the worksheet, encourage them to say answers aloud first and then write them, especially for phonics-based tasks. After completing the worksheet, use one or two examples from the page to start a discussion: "Where else have you seen this in your reading?" These multiple meaning words worksheets are ideal for use during small group reading time, as independent center work, or as a homework activity.

What does this worksheet teach?

These multiple meaning words worksheets for Kindergarten give students focused practice with one of the key skills in early literacy. Students read, identify, and respond to multiple meaning words through a variety of activities designed for their grade level. Our multiple meaning words worksheets build both decoding skills and reading comprehension, helping students connect what they practice on paper to the books they read every day. Regular practice with multiple meaning words strengthens the reading skills that Kindergarten students need to become confident, independent readers.

What grade level is this for?

This worksheet is designed for Kindergarten students (Ages 3-6), aligned to Common Core standard RF.K.3. It can also be used as review for early students at the next grade level or as an introduction for advanced students.

Can I use this for homeschool or classroom?

Yes. This worksheet works for homeschool, classroom, and tutoring settings. Print individual pages for targeted practice, or print the full set as a packet. Works great as a morning warm-up, independent center activity, or fast-finisher task.

Why do kindergarteners need to learn multiple meaning words?

Multiple meaning words are everywhere in early texts: run (exercise vs. run for office), light (bright vs. not heavy), bat (sports equipment vs. nocturnal animal). Understanding context-dependent meaning is part of CCSS L.K.4 and directly impacts listening and reading comprehension. Early exposure prevents the literal misinterpretations that can confuse young readers.

How do you teach multiple meaning words to kindergarteners?

Use picture sorts where students see both meanings illustrated side by side and discuss what makes each different. Read books that play on double meanings or context-dependent words. Anchor charts listing words with two meanings and a picture for each serve as classroom references. Worksheets with two pictures and a fill-in sentence (the ___ is flying overhead) make context choice visual and explicit.

What multiple meaning words should kindergarteners know?

Start with concrete pairs where both meanings are familiar: bat, can, duck, left, right, bark, saw, fly, ring, bank. Words with two very different meanings are easier to teach than subtle semantic nuances. CCSS L.K.4 and L.K.5d ask students to sort words by category and distinguish shades of meaning — multiple meaning words build both vocabulary breadth and context awareness.

Ratings & Reviews

3

Rachel H.

Homeschool parent · Verified download

Jan 2026

I print these every Sunday for the week ahead. My kids never complain about worksheet time when it's ClassWeekly.

Helpful · 10

David L.

2nd Grade Teacher · Verified download

Apr 2026

Exactly what I needed for my students. Clean layout, easy instructions, and the kids actually stay on task.

Helpful · 9

Carlos G.

3rd Grade Teacher · Verified download

Apr 2026

Solid resource. I use these for morning work and they set a calm, focused tone for the day.

Helpful · 6

Worksheet Details

GradeKindergarten
SubjectReading
TopicMultiple meaning words
StandardRF.K.3
Pages1 page
DifficultyMedium

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