Today’s book is called Pinklicious by Victoria Kann and Elizabeth Kann.
We will start right at the beginning. Open your book and read along with me.
It was a rainy day, too wet to go outside.
Mommy said, “let’s make cupcakes! What color do you want?”
“Pink,” I said, “Pink, pink, pink!”
Mommy put in some pink.
“More!” I cried, “More, more, more!”
Let’s read it again:
It was a rainy day, too wet to go outside.
Mommy said, “let’s make cupcakes! What color do you want?”
“Pink,” I said, “Pink, pink, pink!”
Mommy put in some pink.
“More!” I cried, “More, more, more!”
Today we are learning two new words. They are wet and more.
Let’s start with wet.
Repeat after me:
Wet
Wet
Wet
Wet means to be covered with water or another liquid. When it rains, water falls down from the sky and everything gets covered in water. Everything is wet! The opposite of wet is dry.
Repeat after me:
“It was…too wet to go outside.”
“It was…too wet to go outside.”
“It was…too wet to go outside.”
Our next word is more.
Repeat after me:
More
More
More
More means a greater amount. The opposite of more is less. When the girl in the story says she wants more pink, it means she wants her mom to keep putting in the pink color. Some words that have the same meaning as more are extra, additional and further.
Repeat after me:
“More!” I cried, “More, more, more!”
“More!” I cried, “More, more, more!”
“More!” I cried, “More, more, more!”
Great job!
wet
wet/
adjective
adjective: wet; comparative adjective: wetter; superlative adjective: wettest
1.
covered or saturated with water or another liquid.
more
môr/
determiner & pronoun
determiner: more; pronoun: more
1.
comparative of many, much.
2.
a greater or additional amount or degree.