How is this different from the Independence Day word search?
This page focuses on 4th of July celebrations, while the Independence Day page focuses more on history and civic vocabulary.
This 4th of July word search collection focuses on the celebration side of the holiday: fireworks, parades, backyard cookouts, music, blankets, and the long wait for the sky to get dark. It is intentionally separate from the Independence Day history puzzle, which uses more civic vocabulary. Start with the easy cookout list for younger solvers, choose the medium party puzzle for a classroom handout, or try the hard fireworks challenge when you want longer words and backwards paths. Every puzzle can be played online or printed.
Working a printed puzzle from a book or magazine? Recognition runs in your browser. Solve a word search from a photo.
More from the library
Many December traditions in this grid are older than you might guess: mistletoe was hung for luck long before it meant a kiss, and tinsel once shimmered with real silver.
Picture the last day of October: carved pumpkins glowing on the porch, costumes rustling in the dark, and a doorbell that never quite stops ringing.
Americans roast roughly 46 million turkeys every Thanksgiving, and most of the rest of the meal shows up in this grid too.
The custom of sending valentines goes back centuries, but it exploded once cheap printed cards arrived in the 1800s and people could mail affection by the box.
Easter lands in spring for a reason, and the holiday borrows its imagery straight from the season waking up outside: tulips and daffodils pushing through the soil, fresh pastel colors, and new life in the form of chicks and bunnies.
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FAQ
This page focuses on 4th of July celebrations, while the Independence Day page focuses more on history and civic vocabulary.
Yes. Each puzzle has a print-friendly worksheet and a separate answer key.
The fireworks challenge uses the largest grid, longer words, and backwards directions.