Looking for a quick and creative way to challenge your students’ critical thinking and language skills while sparking some laughs? Try Wibble Wobble! In this game, students are given a completely made-up word and must create a sentence that provides enough context clues for others to figure out what the word might mean. The results? Ridiculous, clever, and wildly entertaining!
How to Play:
- Divide & Conquer – Students can play individually or in small groups (2-4 students).
- Assign a Nonsense Word – Each student/group gets a totally made-up word (see below for 20 options).
- Build a Sentence – They must create a sentence using the nonsense word that provides enough context clues to suggest a meaning.
-Example: “Ugh, I forgot my lunch again—what a total flombert moment.” - Share & Guess – Have students read their sentences aloud while classmates try to infer the meaning.
- Extend the Fun – If you teach secondary students, or work with multiple groups of students, try this:
-Give all your classes the same nonsense word.
-Have each class come up with a meaning or create a sentence.
-The next day, display all the class responses and have students vote on the best, worst, or most creative interpretation!
Facilitation Tips:
✔ Set clear rules – No inappropriate words or definitions! Keep it school-appropriate.
✔ Encourage creativity – The sillier the sentence, the better!
✔ Time it – Give students 1-2 minutes to think up their sentence to keep the pace snappy.
✔ Make it competitive – Turn it into a game with categories (Most Believable, Funniest, Most Likely to Be a Real Word).
✔ Use it for a lesson – Want to tie this into learning? Use it to explore how we understand new words in context.
20 Nonsense Words to Use:
Blorfle, Squindle, Glonkle, Wibber, Floomph, Jibbix, Nazzle, Quorbin, Drimpy, Snorp, Yabble, Ziffle, Plonkle, Dorpin, Claggle, Fristick, Whimzle, Bamp, Shnuddle, Grobble
Try Wibble Wobble in your classroom and watch your students turn nonsense into genius-level creativity! Let us know which words got the best (or worst) definitions!
-Edtomorrow Team