Free SLP Medial G Materials, Games, Activities, Flashcards, and more!
Free SLP Medial G Materials, Games, Activities, Flashcards, and more!
FreeSLP offers tons of virtual SLP materials for the S Sound. To help target the G sound in the initial, medial, and final positions, we have created G Tic-Tac-Toe, Connect 4, Virtual Flashcards, Virtual Progression Cards, Battleship, Spot-It, Candy Land, Soccer, Painting, and more!
To view our all free G sound virtual games and materials, click below:
We also have tons of free no-prep downloadable G sound materials. G sound printables that we currently have include: G Flashcards, QR Code Scavenger Hunt, Progression Cards, Spot-It, Word Finds, Tic-Tac-Toe, Bingo, Candy Land, Connect 4, Battleship and more!
If you're looking for more engaging ways to teach the G sound, hopefully you find these materials helpful!
To view our all free G sound virtual games and materials, click below:
Virtual materials to target G from the isolation level all the way up to the conversational level! Whether you're targeting sounds at the word, phrase, sentence, paragraph, story, or conversational levels, we have free and engaging speech therapy materials for each!
To view our all free G Hierarchy Activities, click below:
What age should my kid be able to say the G sound?
Children typically are able to correctly produce the G sound around 3 years old.
Is the G sound a voiced sound?
Yes, the G sound is a voiced sound?
Is the G sound a Dorsal Velar sound?
Yes, the G sound is a dorsal velar sound.
Is the G sound a stop?
Yes, the G sound is a stop.
What is the difference between C / K and G?
The C / K and G sound are produced exactly the same with one exception. The difference between C / K and G is that the C / K sound is voiceless and the G sound is a voiced sound.
50 Initial G Words
- Garden
- Glide
- Ghost
- Go
- Grape
- Glitter
- Giggle
- Ghost
- Group
- Glue
- Gentle
- Gum
- Glow
- Gas
- Gecko
- Gigantic
- Gopher
- Gobble
- Gadget
- Giggly
- Glisten
- Gloom
- Gravy
- Gary
- Gasp
- Glaze
- Gaze
- Glider
- Grind
- Gadget
- Goose
- Galaxy
- Grasp
- Globe
- Giddy
- Giggle
- Grease
- Goop
- Golly
- Grow
- Gab
- Grind
- Gravy
- Greet
- Glove
- Glisten
- Grasp
- Grief
- Groom
- Grin
40 Medial G Words
- Wagon
- Forget
- Jogging
- Bagel
- Goggles
- Hanger
- Eggplant
- Juggle
- Dagger
- Bigger
- Alligator
- Suggest
- Eagle
- Yogurt
- Beagle
- Snuggle
- Hugs
- Buggy
- Yoga
- Giggle
- Gigantic
- Jungle
- Magma
- Cargo
- Ugly
- Magnificent
- Gobble
- Segment
- Doggone
- Tugboat
- Hugging
- Magazine
- Bargain
- Mugshot
- Fragrant
- Sugar
- Bugle
- Legal
- Legume
- Snugly
35 Final G Words
- Big
- Flag
- Jog
- Bug
- Frog
- Log
- Hug
- Gig
- Rug
- Snug
- Pug
- Dug
- Plug
- Slug
- Fling
- Zigzag
- Flog
- Smug
- Snag
- Tug
- Grog
- Drag
- Slog
- Fug
- Dig
- Log
- Glug
- Plague
- Egg
- Stag
- Rug
- Flag
- Bag
- Leg
- Jag
How do I make the G sound?
How to make the “g” sound:
- Tell the child to bring the back of their tongue(called the dorsum) up to the back part of the mouth(called the soft palate). Lifting up the back part of our tongue stops the airflow from coming out of our mouths!
- Turn on your voice ( voice is the rumbling in your vocal folds. Have your child/client place their hand on their/your neck during the production of “c/k” and “g”, and have them feel the difference between the two. In the production of “c/k”, there should be no rumble or voicing. While in the production of “g”, there should be a rumbling or voicing.)
- Next we lower our tongue and push air out explosively at the same time!
Tricks and Tips for producing the “g” sound:
- Tell the child we are going to trap the air from escaping using the back of our tongue. We need to make a hump or a hill using the back of our tongue and bring it to the roof of our mouth.
- A fun and tasty way to teach the child where to put their tongue for a “g” production is to put some Nutella, peanut butter, sour candy gel, or any other spreadable food they enjoy on the soft middle portion of the back of the mouth(soft palate). Once the child has felt the spot a few times, have them try to blow out air while lowering the tongue at the same time!
- If your child is replacing their “g” sounds with “d” sounds. (“dod” for dog”), try using a tongue depressor to hold down the tip of their tongue which should also help the back of their tongue bunch up.
- Place your hand where the child’s jaw and neck meet, and during “g” productions, lightly push up to help remind them to raise the back of their tongue.
- To visually show the child how we explosively release air from our mouths to produce the “g” sound, hold a piece of string in front of their mouths, and have them try to move the string with the release of air. It is important to remind them to remember to use their voicing during this activity!
- If you have a board game that uses a spinner, have the child see if they can move the spinner using the explosions of air from their mouths.
- Have the child tilt their head back and look up at the ceiling. By doing so, our tongues tend to fall into the back of our mouths into the position we need to make the “g” sounds
- Challenge the child to an imaginary water/juice/milk drinking contest. See you can making the “g” gulping noise the most times in 10 or 30 seconds!
G Sound Overview
If you are looking for tips and tricks on how to produce the perfect G sounds; click the link below:
Virtual Materials for Each Level of Artic Practice:
Target the G sound at the isolation level with 3 different activities: Isolation Animation, Pop the Bubbles, and Click the Button!
Target G at the syllable level with our virtual flashcards!
We have three activities for targeting G at the word level: 1.) Classic flashcards with initial, medial, final, and mixed sets. 2.) Minimal Pair Sliders 3.) Name the Photos (Have the computer give you feedback on your sound productions!)
G phrase flashcards with sets targeting G in the initial, medial, final, and mixed positions!
Target G at the sentence level with our rotating sentences activity!
Our G story is full of G target sounds and tongue twisters! Read it yourself or play it out loud and then repeat it back!
We have two ways to target G at the conversation level: 1.) Silly story scenes full of G target words. 2.) Conversation starter questions.
List of All the Free G Sound Virtual Activities and Games
G Flashcards
G Progression Cards
G Soccer Shootout
G Paint
G Spot It
G Escape From Dragon's Dungeon
G Fish's Flight to Freedom
G Witch's Brew
G Summer Sundae Dash
G Fall Apple Quest
G Halloween Candy Chompers
G Thanksgiving Treats
G Cupid's Valentines Candies
G Marshmallows' Mad Dash
G Unicorn Artic Derby
G Train Track Dash
G Space Race
G Flashlight Finder
G Feed the Bear
G Pumpkin Carving
G Build-a-Snowman
G Thanksgiving Dinner
G Jeopardy
G Tic-Tac-Toe
G Candy Land
G Connect 4
G Battleship
G Artic Ninja
G Cat Run
G Volt Runner
G Artic Clicker
G Pizza Jumper
G Artic Cruiser
G Space Invaders
G Spot the Differences
G Dino Hop
G Matching
G Treasure Hunt
G Crossword
G Word Find 1
G Word Find 2
List of All the Free G Sound Downloadable and Printable and Games
G Artic QR Scavenger Hunt
G Artic Progression Cards
G Artic Spot the Match
Initial Artic G Flashcards
Medial Artic G Flashcard
Final Artic G Flashcards
G Articulation Carrier Phrases
G Articulation Word Find
G ArticulationTic-Tac-Toe
G Articulation Coloring Sheet
G Cartoon Character Flashcards
G Articulation Dice
G Articulation Flipbook
G Artic Bingo
G Artic Candyland
G Artic Cariboo Cards
G Artic Battleship
G Articulation Connect 4
Free no-prep, virtual, and downloadable options available!
Free SLP articulation word lists, flashcards with pictures, downloadable PDFs and more!
Materials target the G sound in the initial, medial, and final positions!
Whether you are looking for printable, no-prep, or virtual materials, FreeSLP offers free G sound activities for students of every level!
We hope these G articulation activities and exercises for speech therapy help your child / student learn how to make s sounds!