Grade 5 Spelling Words
Grade 5 is the final boss of primary school spelling! These 50 words are the toughest — ‘miscellaneous’, ‘exaggerate’, ‘Mediterranean’, ‘acquaintance’. They come from Latin, French, and Greek, with spellings that follow foreign rules. Master these and you’re secondary-school ready!
These words appear in competitive exams, spelling bees, and entrance tests. Each has a memory trick that turns chaos into clarity. By Grade 5, your child should know 500+ words — these 50 are the crown jewels!
🏆 Championship-Level Words
🏛️ Latin & Greek Origin Words
🇫🇷 French Origin Words
🔀 Confusing Pairs & Endings
🚀 Mega Words — 4+ Syllables
📐 5 Spelling Rules
Greek Words: PH=F, PS=S, CH=K
Psychology (P silent), philosophy (PH=F), chaos (CH=K), phenomenon (PH=F). Know the Greek patterns!
French Words: Silent End Letters
French words often have silent final letters: debris (S silent), genre (E barely heard), lieutenant, etiquette.
Confusing Pairs: Use Memory Tricks
PrinciPAL = your PAL. StationERY = Envelopes. ComplIMENT = I give praise. AccEPT = take in, ExCEPT = leave out.
Long Words: Break Into Parts
Extra+ordinary, dis+appoint+ment, un+fortunate+ly, auto+bio+graphy. Small parts = easy spelling!
Latin Plurals in English
phenomenon→phenomena, hypothesis→hypotheses, crisis→crises. Learn the Latin/Greek plural forms!
🐝 Spelling Quiz
🔀 Word Scramble
Unscramble the letters
✏️ Fill in Missing Letters
Type the missing letters
❓ FAQ
What Grade 5 words appear in spelling bees?
Miscellaneous, exaggerate, Mediterranean, acquaintance, bureaucracy, entrepreneur, onomatopoeia, and conscientious are common spelling bee words for the 10-11 age group.
How to spell ‘Mediterranean’?
MediTERRanean — the trick is the double R in the middle. MEDI + TERR + ANEAN. Think ‘TERR’ like ‘terrain’ (land).
What’s the difference between principal and principle?
PrinciPAL (ends in PAL) = a person (school head) or ‘main’. PrinciPLE (ends in PLE) = a rule or belief. Remember: the PrinciPAL is your PAL!
How to handle French-origin words?
Learn 3 rules: final T is often silent (debut, buffet), CH sounds like SH (chauffeur, brochure), and -IQUE ending is common (boutique, technique, unique).
Is my child ready for secondary school spelling?
If they can spell 40+ words on this page correctly, they’re well prepared! Grade 5 spelling covers the most challenging patterns they’ll encounter in secondary school.