Make vocabulary practice active, fun, and full of student talk-time!
Bingo is incredibly versatile and can bring real variety into your lessons. It works with any level, any topic, and any age group — and on top of that, kids and adults absolutely love it. Because this little game is such a powerful teaching tool, it deserves its very own blog post!
Here are 16 creative ways to play Bingo with any vocabulary set, whether you’re working on season words, clothes, animals, food, school items, or simple verbs.
1. Classic Picture Bingo
The well-known version: you call the word, students listen and mark it. Perfect as a warm-up or end-of-lesson activity.
2. Action Bingo
Turn vocabulary into small movements: pretend to jump, drink, fly, shiver, clap.
Children act it out first — then find the matching picture on their Bingo card.
3. Story Bingo
Create a short story using all the vocabulary items.
Every time a word appears, students mark the picture on their card.
Ideal for connecting vocabulary with meaningful context.
Find the free printable on my homepage!
=> Idea for a story:“First, I put on my hat, my scarf and my gloves. Then I went outside.
I saw snowflakes falling and lots of snow on the ground. I built a snowman and saw some penguins and a polar bear nearby! Is that even possible?
I grabbed my sled and went to sled down the hill. Wheee! Later, I tried to ski too. Some reindeer were watching me play.
After playing in the snow, I went inside. I lit a candle and sat by the fireplace. It was warm. I drank some hot chocolate.
It was a perfect snowy day!”
4. Challenge Bingo (for older kids)
Use more detailed or abstract vocabulary.
Call:
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definitions (“You wear this when it’s cold.”),
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spelling (“S-T-O-N-E”),
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or What’s Missing? (show pictures → remove one).
Go outside and make them move.
Great for grades 3 and up.
5. Mixed Skills Bingo
Every round is different — definition, sound, riddle, movement, sentence.
They have to give the definition of their pictures - or give them the definition.
Fantastic for mixed-ability groups and active lessons.
6. Whisper Bingo
You whisper the word to one student → it travels around the circle → the last student says it aloud.
If it’s on their card, everyone marks it.
Quiet, funny, and excellent for listening. They love whisper games! Make it more fun by saying the words really strange!
7. Picture Hunt Bingo
Hide small picture cards around the classroom.
Students search for pictures they also have on their Bingo sheet.
Great for movement and for younger children.
8. Sound Bingo
Make a sound or use a sound cue (e.g., bell, wind, water, animal noise).
Children guess the picture and mark it.
Works wonderfully with any topic that has recognisable sounds.
9. Memory Bingo
Show 5–8 flashcards for a few seconds → hide them.
Only then give them thier bingo cards. Students mark down any they remember. Which ones do they have on their card?
A calm concentration game.
10. Riddle Bingo
Instead of naming the word, give a small riddle:
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“I can fly.”
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“I’m cold and fall from the sky.”
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“You can eat me.”
Students solve it before marking.
11. Partner Bingo
Students work in pairs. Give them stripes of words or pictures of the set of vocabulary.
One describes the picture (“You wear this on your feet”), the other listens and marks it.
Boosts speaking and descriptive language.
12. Build-a-Sentence Bingo
Call a short sentence that includes the vocabulary word:
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“I can see a penguin.”
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“She is drinking juice.”
Students identify the picture inside the sentence.
Great for grammar integration.
13. Speed Round Bingo
Show a flashcard for exactly one second.
Students must react quickly and locate it on their card.
High energy and great fun.
14. Reverse Bingo
Students call the words — and you mark them on a teacher Bingo card.
When you get Bingo first, they go wild. Works every time.
15. Freeze Bingo
Play music → students move around → stop music → call a word.
They freeze like statues and mark it.
Perfect for movement breaks.
16. Drawing Bingo
Give empty Bingo boxes.
Call the word → students draw it.
First to complete a row wins.
Highly creative and fantastic for deeper vocabulary retention.
Final Thoughts
These Bingo variations work with any topic, any grade, and any group size. Whether you’re teaching numbers, weather, food, animals, clothing, or classroom objects, Bingo can transform simple vocabulary practice into an interactive, joyful lesson.
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