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25 answers

thyme

2006-11-27 06:45:32 · answer #1 · answered by sofacue 2 · 2 0

I am a trainee teacher and if I had set that homework on a placement I would have been seriously criticised for giving a un-answerable homework!

The point is the teacher wants your child to use the 'th' sound. So just focus on that, say some words with 'th' together with your child. And tell the teacher that's what you've done because there are nearly no foods beginning with 'th'.

Ask the other parents, I bet they are in the same position...

2006-11-27 20:02:59 · answer #2 · answered by Adam H 1 · 1 0

Since it's for a 5 year old, they may be looking for something as simple as "Thanksgiving turkey." Otherwise that just seems too hard.

You could also say thai food, thyme (not exactly a "food"), or thousand island dressing. None of which are things they should expect a five year old to know.

2006-11-27 06:53:08 · answer #3 · answered by EQ 6 · 0 0

Does it have to be a food? Thousand Island Dressing isn't really a food, and "thousand" is just an adjective describing the dressing. Thick soup -- again -- just the adjective describing any kind of soup. What, specifically, was the objective and purpose of the assignment? Can he get creative with using the TH?

2006-11-27 06:50:37 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Thix Thizzling Thauthages

2006-11-27 06:50:02 · answer #5 · answered by Hustler 3 · 1 0

Thai Food

2006-11-27 06:54:00 · answer #6 · answered by scuffy 2 · 1 0

Thai Food

2006-11-27 06:48:26 · answer #7 · answered by Ginnykitty 7 · 1 0

Thousand island dressing, Three cheese pizza, Thyme( herb) this is a difficult one for a 5 yr old, must be clever lol.

2006-11-27 21:14:23 · answer #8 · answered by Lisa W 2 · 0 0

Thousand Island dressing

2006-11-27 06:46:12 · answer #9 · answered by DrMikeonCall 4 · 0 0

Thyme
Thread noodles

2006-11-27 06:57:58 · answer #10 · answered by creviazuk 6 · 0 0

Well, there is thyme - although you lose the 'th' sound, which I suppose is the purpose of the exercise. Hmm... thigh? as in chicken? I guess 'thick steak' is pushing it.

2006-11-27 06:48:38 · answer #11 · answered by DavidShag 1 · 0 0

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