Ga-looWorksheet Generator for SLPs

Nature-Themed Medial R Words & Worksheet

10 nature words that really contain /r/ in the medial position — every word checked against the CMU Pronouncing Dictionary, 10 of them free of competing sounds. Practice the target inside a theme the child actually cares about.

What a generated worksheet looks like

Articulation practice
Target /r/ · Medial · Nature
/r/
01horse
02marsh
03shark
04berry
05carrot
06cherry
07forest
08garden
verified/r/: 10 words · competing-free 10

Generate this exact worksheet

Ga-loo builds a printable Nature-themed worksheet for /r/ — choose the age range and word density, and every word is phonetically checked before the PDF is built. Free trial, no card.

Create a Nature worksheet

Nature Medial R word list

1-syllable words

  • horse
  • marsh
  • shark

2-syllable words

  • berry
  • carrot
  • cherry
  • forest
  • garden
  • parrot
  • stormy

Word pronunciations are checked with the CMU Pronouncing Dictionary.

Nature-themed practice phrases

Short verified phrases built from the themed list — pronunciation-checked, with no competing sounds.

  • red berry1× /r/
  • big forest1× /r/
  • green garden2× /r/
  • hot stormy day1× /r/
  • pet parrot1× /r/
  • brown horse2× /r/
  • marsh mud1× /r/
  • red cherry1× /r/
  • hard carrot2× /r/
  • big shark1× /r/

Why themed practice works

Repetition is the engine of articulation therapy, and interest is its fuel: a child who loves nature will happily produce more trials with these words than with a generic list. The theme changes motivation, not the mechanics — the target is still /r/ in the medial position.

Pick a handful of words at the child’s level and pair them with a game or a worksheet. As always, target selection belongs to the SLP — these lists support practice, they do not replace judgment.

Same target, other themes

Frequently asked questions

What are some nature words with /r/?
Verified examples include horse, marsh, shark, berry, carrot, cherry. The full list above groups all 10 words by syllable count.
Do themed word lists actually help articulation practice?
The mechanics of practice do not change, but engagement does: interests drive more repetitions, and repetitions drive progress. A theme is a motivation tool, not a different method.
How is this list verified?
Every word’s pronunciation is checked against the CMU Pronouncing Dictionary: the /r/ sound must really occur in the medial position, and the sound must be visible in the spelling. Words that only look right are excluded.
Can I get a printable Nature-themed worksheet?
Yes — that is exactly what Ga-loo generates: pick /r/, the medial position, an age range and the nature theme, review the phonetic report, and download the PDF.