cbeebies shows | alphablocks toys | alphabet song | ABCDEFG song nursery rhyme
Alphablocks is a British CGI-animated children's educational television programme that tries to teach children how to spell with the use of animated blocks representing each letter.
CBeebies is the brand used by the BBC for programming aimed at encouraging "learning through play in a consistently safe environment for children aged 6 or under",[2] and providing "high quality, mostly UK-produced programmes"
An alphabet song is any of various songs used to teach children an alphabet. Alphabet songs typically follow the alphabetic principle (though the phonics method offers variants). In languages such as English with morphophonemic variation (e.g. "cake" is /ˈkeɪk/, not [ˈkaːkɛ]), an alphabet song usually chooses a particular pronunciation for each letter in the alphabet and also typically for some words in the song.
A, B, C, D, E, F, G;
H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P
Q R S, T U V,
Double-U, X, Y and Z,
Now I know my abc's,
Next time won't you sing with me
A is for apple.
B plays the bass.
C makes things crack.
D plays the drums.
E makes an echo.
F can fly.
G glugs.
H huffs and puffs.
I is so important, she sings.
J jumps like a jaybird.
K kicks his ball.
L sings a lullaby.
M likes to munch.
N says no!
O says... O! O! O!
P appears with a pop.
Q is quiet without U.
R roars like a pirate.
S is for sag.
T tuts when he runs out of tea.
U thinks everything is unfair.
V vrooms around.
W is weepy.
X uses his x-rays.
Y says yes!
Z goes zzzzzzz! Wake up.
Alphablocks is a British CGI-animated children's educational television programme that tries to teach children how to spell with the use of animated blocks representing each letter.
CBeebies is the brand used by the BBC for programming aimed at encouraging "learning through play in a consistently safe environment for children aged 6 or under",[2] and providing "high quality, mostly UK-produced programmes"
An alphabet song is any of various songs used to teach children an alphabet. Alphabet songs typically follow the alphabetic principle (though the phonics method offers variants). In languages such as English with morphophonemic variation (e.g. "cake" is /ˈkeɪk/, not [ˈkaːkɛ]), an alphabet song usually chooses a particular pronunciation for each letter in the alphabet and also typically for some words in the song.
A, B, C, D, E, F, G;
H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P
Q R S, T U V,
Double-U, X, Y and Z,
Now I know my abc's,
Next time won't you sing with me
A is for apple.
B plays the bass.
C makes things crack.
D plays the drums.
E makes an echo.
F can fly.
G glugs.
H huffs and puffs.
I is so important, she sings.
J jumps like a jaybird.
K kicks his ball.
L sings a lullaby.
M likes to munch.
N says no!
O says... O! O! O!
P appears with a pop.
Q is quiet without U.
R roars like a pirate.
S is for sag.
T tuts when he runs out of tea.
U thinks everything is unfair.
V vrooms around.
W is weepy.
X uses his x-rays.
Y says yes!
Z goes zzzzzzz! Wake up.
Category
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Learning