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Rhyming Words Dominoes: A Fun Literacy Game for Kids

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Looking for a simple way to make reading practice more fun? These DIY Rhyming Words Dominoes turn an ordinary set of dominoes into a hands-on literacy game that helps children recognize rhyming word patterns and build important early reading skills.

We have always loved playing dominoes in our house. They’re great for math, strategy, and problem-solving, but one day I realized they could also become a fun reading game with just a little creativity.

Using the backs of a set of dominoes, we created our own rhyming words dominoes, and they quickly became a favorite learning activity.

Why Are Rhyming Words Important?

Rhyming is one of the foundational skills that helps children learn to read.

When kids recognize that words like cat, hat, bat, and mat share the same ending sound, they begin noticing word patterns and sound relationships.

Rhyming activities help children develop:

  • Phonemic awareness
  • Listening skills
  • Vocabulary
  • Reading readiness
  • Spelling skills
  • Word-family recognition

Many reading specialists consider rhyming one of the earliest building blocks of literacy.

Rhyming words dominoes

How to Make Rhyming Words Dominoes

One of the best things about this activity is that it requires very few supplies.

Supplies

Instructions

Cover the back of each domino with painter’s tape or masking tape and trim the edges neatly.

Draw a line down the center of each domino to create two spaces for words.

Choose several rhyming word families and write words on the dominoes. Be sure not to place matching rhymes on the same domino.

For example:

  • at
  • hat
  • bat
  • mat
  • sat

Mix the words among several dominoes so children have to search for matching rhymes.

How to Play

Spread the dominoes out on a table.

Players take turns finding rhyming words and connecting the dominoes together into one long chain.

The goal is to connect words that belong to the same word family.

For example:

cat → hat → bat → mat → sat

Continue building until all of the dominoes have been used.

Rhyming Dominoes

Rhyming Word Families to Use

Need some ideas for rhyming sets?

Try these:

-AT Family

cat, hat, bat, mat, sat

-OG Family

dog, log, fog, hog, jog

-AN Family

fan, man, pan, can, van

-IG Family

pig, wig, dig, fig, big

-OP Family

hop, mop, top, pop, shop

-AKE Family

cake, bake, lake, rake, snake

Using common word families helps children begin recognizing spelling patterns and decoding new words.

Learning Extensions

Once your children master simple rhyming words, try increasing the challenge.

Timed Challenge

See how quickly players can connect all the rhyming words.

Build New Words

Ask children to think of additional words that belong in each word family.

Sort by Word Family

Place all dominoes from the same word family into groups.

Create Silly Sentences

Choose several rhyming words and use them in a funny sentence.

More Ways to Use Dominoes for Learning

One reason I love this activity is how versatile it is.

You can easily create dominoes for:

  • Sight words
  • Spelling words
  • Vocabulary words
  • Prefixes and suffixes
  • Synonyms and antonyms
  • Alphabet matching
  • Math facts
  • Spanish vocabulary

If your children have a skill they are practicing, chances are you can turn it into a domino game!

rhyming words on the back of dominoes

Why Kids Love Learning Games

Learning games make practice feel less like work and more like play.

Instead of completing another worksheet, children are actively manipulating pieces, searching for patterns, and solving problems. The hands-on element keeps kids engaged while reinforcing important literacy concepts.

Sometimes the simplest learning activities become the most memorable.

More Reading Activities for Kids

If your children enjoy these Rhyming Words Dominoes, be sure to explore some of my other literacy activities and printable learning games designed to build reading skills through play.

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7 Comments

    1. Dominoes….. I used the concept of ‘one digit more’ to teach adding. A four had to be matched to a five etc. Also used the ‘one digit less’.

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