Kindergarden - The Five Senses

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

92 The Five Senses: Supplemental Guide 4 | I Use My Tongue to Taste


 Produce and expand complete sentences in shared language
activities through answering questions (L.K.1f)
 Identify new meanings for bump and apply them accurately (L.K.4a)
 Use the frequently occurring affixes (e.g.–ful and –less) as a clue to
the meaning of flavorful and flavorless (L.K.4b)
 Categorize flavorful foods and flavorless foods to gain a sense of the
concept of flavor (L.K.5a)
 Identify real-life connections between words—taste, different, bump,
flavorful, pucker-up and unpleasant—and their use (L.K.5c)
 Explain the meaning of “get used to” and “pucker up” and use in
appropriate contexts (L.K.6)

Core Vocabulary
congested, adj. Having too much mucus or fluid in your nose
Example: I am so congested that I cannot breathe very well.
Variation(s): none
flavorful, adj. Having a strong and pleasant taste
Example: The fried fish was very flavorful.
Variation(s): none
pucker, v. To purse your lips together so that you look like a fish or as if you
are ready to give someone a kiss
Example: The sour taste of lemons always makes me pucker.
Variation(s): puckers, puckered, puckering
saliva, n. The watery fluid in your mouth
Example: I swallowed the saliva in my mouth.
Variation(s): none
taste, v. To detect flavors with your tongue
Example: Did you taste the chocolate ice cream?
Variation(s): tastes, tasted, tasting
taste buds, n. Tiny bumps on the tongue receptors that send taste
messages to the brain
Example: Human beings have many taste buds on their tongue.
Variation(s): taste bud
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