Bingo ideas / For the classroom

Parts of the Body Bingo Cards

The game that turns body-part vocabulary into a lively round. Call a word and students cover the matching part — say "elbow" and they mark it, point to your knee and they find the word — and the first to a line wins.

Free to design and print · edit any square · 3×3, 4×4, or 5×5

Parts of the body bingo helps young learners and language students lock in everyday vocabulary without a worksheet. Start from the schoolhouse template, keep the body parts below or swap in the words your lesson is teaching, and you have cards ready to print in a couple of minutes.

Because every card is shuffled from the same square list, no two students get the same grid — so the whole class can play at once and each child still tracks their own set of words.

Squares for a parts of the body card
  • Head
  • Shoulder
  • Arm
  • Elbow
  • Hand
  • Finger
  • Leg
  • Knee
  • Foot
  • Toe
  • Eye
  • Ear
  • Nose
  • Mouth
  • Neck
  • Chest
  • Back
  • Stomach
  • Wrist
  • Ankle
  • Hair
  • Chin
  • Cheek
  • Thumb

These are just a starting point — swap in your own words in the editor before you print.

Ideas for your game
  • Point instead of saying it

    Touch the body part instead of reading the word, so students link the sound to the place and the game doubles as a listening exercise.

  • Use it for language class

    Swap the squares for body-part words in the language you are teaching, and call them aloud so learners practice listening and vocabulary at once.

  • Print a class set or play live

    Print one card per student for centers, or share a link and QR code so the room can play together from tablets in a whole-class round.

Editable and printable

Edit every square. Open the card in the editor, keep the suggested squares or replace them with your own words, emoji, or photos, and pick a theme that fits the day.

Print a whole set at once. Each card is shuffled from the same square list, so every player gets a unique grid. Print to standard letter or A4 paper on any home printer — or order professionally printed cards shipped to your door.

Or play live. Share one link and a QR code and the whole room plays from their phones, in person or over video.

Questions

How do I make parts of the body bingo for free?

Open the editor, choose the schoolhouse theme, keep the body-part squares or type your own list, then print. A basic class set is free to make.

Can I use it for language learning?

Yes. Replace the squares with body-part words in any language and call them aloud, so learners practice listening and vocabulary together.

What age group is this best for?

It suits preschool and early elementary learners, plus beginner language students of any age who are building everyday vocabulary.

How many cards should I print?

One per student. Each card is shuffled from the same word list, so every child gets a unique grid and the whole class can play together fairly.