Learn the English Alphabets (A–Z) — Grade 1

Learn Alphabets A to Z for Kids | Grade 1 | English1to5.com
⭐ Grade 1 • Step 1 🔤

Learn the English Alphabets (A–Z)

Meet all 26 letters — the building blocks of every English word! Tap any letter to start learning.

🔤 26 Letters 🔊 Phonics for Each 🎮 Quizzes & Games ✏️ Tracing Practice

👋 What are Alphabets?

The English language has 26 letters called the alphabet. Every word you read, write, or speak is made from these 26 letters! They go in a special order: A, B, C, D, E… all the way to Z.

Each letter has two forms — an uppercase (big) like A, B, C and a lowercase (small) like a, b, c. Each letter also makes its own special sound — that’s called phonics!

💡 How to Use This Page

Tap on any letter card below to go to its dedicated lesson page where you’ll learn its sound, see example words, play Spot the Letter, trace the letter, and take a quiz!

🅰️ All 26 Letters

Tap any letter to open its full lesson page!

🔴🔵 Vowels & Consonants

The 26 letters are split into two groups — learn the difference!

🔴 5 Vowels

A E I O U

Vowels are special letters — every word needs at least one! They make open sounds: “ah”, “eh”, “ih”, “oh”, “uh”. Remember: A, E, I, O, U!

🔵 21 Consonants

BC DF GH JK LM NP QR ST VW XY Z

Consonants are all the other letters! They make sounds using your lips, tongue, and teeth: “buh”, “kuh”, “duh”, “fuh” and more.

💡 Easy Way to Remember

Say this out loud: “A – E – I – O – U, these are vowels, just a few!” Everything else is a consonant. The letter Y is special — it can be both!

🎮 Quick Alphabet Quiz

Test your alphabet knowledge!

How many letters are in the English alphabet?

Which of these is a vowel?

Which is the lowercase form of D?

What letter comes after M?

How many vowels are there in the alphabet?

Which is the last letter of the alphabet?

🎉 Quiz Complete!

0/6

🧠 Tips for Parents — Help Your Child Learn the Alphabet

🎵

Sing the ABC Song Daily

The classic ABC song is the fastest way to memorize all 26 letters. Sing it during bath time, car rides, or before bed!

👆

Point & Name Letters Everywhere

Point at letters on signs, food packets, and books. “Look, that’s a B for Biscuit!” This builds letter recognition naturally.

✏️

Practice Tracing Daily

Use each letter’s lesson page to trace letters on screen, or give your child a pencil and paper to practise writing 2–3 letters per day.

🎲

Play Letter Games

Try “I Spy the Letter” or “What starts with B?” — turning practice into a game makes kids excited to learn more!

📅

One Letter Per Day

Don’t rush! Cover one letter page per day. In less than a month, your child will know all 26 letters confidently.

Ready to Start? Pick Letter A! 🍎

Begin with the first letter and work your way through all 26 — one letter at a time!