Spatial Vocabulary
Spatial vocabulary is the set of words a child uses to describe where things are and how they sit in relation to each other — above and below, inside and outside, near and far, between, before and after. These words do far more work than they appear to. A child who can say the fan is above the table or that Riya is sitting between Aman and Sita is laying the groundwork for geometric thinking, map reading and even early number lines (where 3 comes before 4). The tricky part for young learners is that most of these terms are relative, not fixed. A pencil is near the bag in one moment and far from it the next, depending on what you compare it to. CTET leans on exactly this relativity: rather than asking for a definition, it shows a picture or a real-life scene and asks the child to read off the relationship. So the teaching that matters here is concrete and physical — children put blocks inside a basket, stand outside a chalk circle, or line up and work out who is standing before them. The vocabulary sticks when the body experiences it, not when it is memorised from a chart.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Spatial vocabulary and direction (the words children must master)
| Position words | above / below, inside / outside, near / far, between, before / after |
|---|---|
| Lateral directions | left and right — self-referential, they flip when you face someone |
| Absolute directions | up and down — fixed by gravity, do not depend on which way you face |
| Cardinal directions | Sun RISES in the East, SETS in the West; North opposite South |
Shapes and visualisation (what the eye and mind do)
| 2-D shapes | flat, two dimensions — circle, square, triangle, rectangle |
|---|---|
| 3-D shapes | solid, three dimensions — sphere, cube, cone, cylinder |
| Faces, edges, vertices | cube = 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices (counting practice for kids) |
| Visualisation | picturing how a shape looks when folded, rotated, cut or seen from another side |