Lesson of the Day 62: Grammar Symbols
Published on: May 05, 2026
In the Montessori classroom, grammar is not a set of dry rules to memorize — it is a hands-on, sensorial experience. The Grammar Symbols are one of Dr. Montessori’s most elegant inventions: a set of colorful 3D shapes that children physically place above words to identify parts of speech.
What Are the Montessori Grammar Symbols?
The Grammar Symbols represent each part of speech:
- Noun — Large black triangle.
- Article — Small light-blue triangle.
- Adjective — Medium dark-blue triangle.
- Verb — Large red circle.
- Adverb — Small orange circle.
- Pronoun — Purple isosceles triangle.
- Preposition — Green crescent.
- Conjunction — Pink bar.
- Interjection — Gold keyhole shape.
Materials
- Montessori wooden grammar symbols
- Sentence strips
- Optional: 3D grammar symbols set
Presentation
- The Noun Game
- The Verb Game
- Combining
Extending the Work
Introduce one new symbol at a time. Articles and adjectives come next. Prepositions through physical play. Adverbs modify the verb game.
The Grammar Boxes
Grammar Symbols work alongside the Grammar Boxes — color-coded boxes filled with sentence cards.
Why It Works
Self-correcting, beautiful, tactile. See also: Moveable Alphabet, Sandpaper Letters, Grammar Exercises.
Tips for Parents
- Follow the child’s interest.
- Use real sentences from daily life.
- Make it playful!
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