Book Language: English

Books in English

  • 100 First Words in French

    100 First Words in French

    100 first words in French:

    100 First Words in French

    100 First Words in French turns natural curiosity into a bilingual vocabulary playground, helping little learners connect everyday objects with their names in French and English. For families raising bilingual children, it’s the kind of book that quietly builds language while your toddler enthusiastically points at everything on the page.

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    About

    100 First Words in French: Bilingual Picture Book for Kids (English / French with Pronunciations) introduces young children to common everyday vocabulary in both languages. It presents objects through clear pictures paired with French and English words, along with phonetic pronunciation to help parents read the French words aloud confidently.

    The vocabulary covers familiar toddler territory — animals, food, toys, clothing, and household objects — making it easy for children to recognise what they see and hear.

    Languages available:

    ,
    Format:
    Paperback
    Pages:
    41
    Price:
    £10.51
    Size (cm):
    21.59 x 0.25 x 21.59
    Publisher:
    YukiBooks
    Author:
    ISBN:
    2384120018
    • 100 first words in french cover
    • 100 first words in french back cover

    Why This Book is Perfect for Bilingual Babies

    1. It’s images are real photos. When they see a clear picture of a familiar object and hear the word spoken aloud, their brain connects the image and the sound quickly. Seeing the word in French and English side by side helps bilingual brains store both labels for the same thing.
    2. The book includes QR codes with audio pronunciation. Scan the code and you’re taken to a webpage where the word is pronounced in both French and Canadian French. This is surprisingly helpful for parents who want to introduce French but aren’t confident about pronunciation. Instead of guessing whether you just invented a new dialect, you can quickly hear the word spoken properly.
    3. It has practical vocabulary. These are everyday objects toddlers recognise immediately — food, animals, toys, things around the house. Which means the moment you close the book, your toddler will spot the same object somewhere else and proudly test their brand-new French word on it. Often at maximum volume.

    “What convinced me to buy is the combination of realistic photos and clear structure that makes the book very educationally valuable. We use it daily!”

    Chris

    3 Ways to Use This Book

    1. Point – Translate – Repeat

    Point to the picture and say the word in French first, then English.
    “Pomme… apple.” Encourage your toddler to repeat whichever version they feel like shouting today.

    2. Find It Around the House

    After reading a page, look for the same object nearby.
    “Look — pomme! Just like in the book.” That connection helps toddlers move the word from page to real life.

    3. Two-Language Echo

    Say the word once in French and once in English.
    Chien… dog.” Toddlers love echoing words, especially if you add enthusiasm or a silly voice.

    My Recommendation

    ★★★★

    100 First Words in French delivers exactly what parents often need in the toddler years: simple vocabulary exposure in two languages.

    The combination of pictures, translations, and pronunciation support makes it accessible for bilingual families, including those where only one parent speaks French confidently.

    Worth buying as an early French–English vocabulary builder for toddlers.

    Language Simplicity

    4 / 5

    Simple language

    Visual Support

    5 / 5

    Real photographs make objects easy to recognise.

    Engagement longevity

    4 / 5

    Strong for toddlers aged roughly 1–3.

    What Works

    + The phonetic pronunciation makes French accessible even for parents who don’t speak it fluently.

    + Real photos of objects and animals

    + The everyday objects make it easy for toddlers to connect the book with their environment.

    + Helps to build quick, interactive reading moments

    Concerns

    – No storyline

    -Not for children who already know the objects

    – Not for small babies as the pages are too thin for them

    Build the Collection

    There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to write one.

    Maria Ivanova, Multilingual parent & book reviewer

    Oct 2, 2025

    Where to buy

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  • Besos for Baby: A Little Book of Kisses

    Besos for Baby: A Little Book of Kisses

    Besos for Baby

    Besos for Baby: A Little Book of Kisses

    Besos for Baby celebrates kisses from everyone in a toddler’s world — mummy, papi, doggy, using gentle rhyme in English followed by a Spanish echo.

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    About

    Among the abundance of sensory-rich books lining shop shelves, Besos For Baby earns its place through pure, simple charm and a whole lot of heart. It softly introduces Spanish without turning storytime into a language lesson, while you snuggle with your baby on a bed. Across its 20 pages, 10 warm characters from Mami and Papi to a butterfly and the world itself, each take their turn giving kisses to the baby, weaving bilingual love into every page.

    Languages available:

    ,
    Format:
    Board Book
    Pages:
    20
    Price:
    £6.99
    Size (cm):
    18 x 18 x 1,5
    Publisher:
    Little, Brown Young Readers US
    Author:
    Jen Arena
    ISBN:
    0316230375
    • Besos Baby Besos cover
    • Besos Baby Besos pages

    Why This Book is Perfect for Bilingual Babies

    1. It’s repetitive. Uses the same rhythmic structure on every page — English description, then Spanish phrase. By the fifth read, your baby anticipates the “Besos…” part. That anticipation builds confidence.
    2. It encourages code-switching. Blends English and Spanish seamlessly instead of separating them. our child says “Doggy besos!” and instead of correcting them, you smile — because that’s bilingual brilliance in action.
    3. It’s emotional. Emotionally charged words stick. Love-based interactions strengthen memory pathways far more than abstract nouns. Your child may not remember “perro” from a flashcard. But they will remember it from giggling at a pretend dog kiss.

    “I was worried it would feel like a translation exercise. It didn’t. It felt like our normal bedtime — just slightly more musical. Now my daughter shouts ‘Besos!’ before daycare drop-off.”

    Anna, mum to a 9-month-old

    2 Ways to Use This Book

    1. Echo & Expand

    Read the English line. Pause. Let your child attempt the Spanish refrain. Then expand naturally: “Besos, perro, besos.”
    “Yes! The doggy gives kisses. El perro da besos.”

    2. Family Swap Game

    After reading, personalise: “Besos, Abuela, besos.”

    My Recommendation

    ★★★★★

    Worth buying. This is a simple, warm, confidence-building first Spanish book for babies and young toddlers. I would happily recommend it for families with children under two, especially if you are introducing Spanish gently and want it to feel natural rather than instructional. It works beautifully in mixed-language households and for heritage parents who sometimes worry they are not “doing enough.” Besos for Baby proves that small, repeated moments of connection are enough.

    Tips. Besos baby Besos shines in post-bath cosy time, bedtime wind-down, and morning cuddle before nursery.

    Language Simplicity

    5 / 5

    Simple, repetitive syntax for even non-fluent parents

    Visual Support

    4 / 5

    Very simple but lovely images

    Sensory Engagement

    2 / 5

    No buttons, slides, textures, etc.

    What Works

    + Great at creating emotional connection

    + Durable pages

    + Works in any language, not just Spanish

    + Affordable

    + Simple enough for newborns, engaging for toddlers

    Concerns

    – Very basic (older toddlers will outgrow it)

    – Best as part of a small rotation, not the only book

    – No sensory engagements apart from illustrations

    Build the Collection

    amazing

    November 19, 2025

    amazing book

    Maria

    Maria Ivanova, Multilingual parent & book reviewer

    Nov 20, 2025

    Where to buy

    I earn a commission if you purchase through these links, at no extra cost to you.

    Join Our Chaos Club

    Unlock the milestones checklist that can be applied to any language. Plus monthly book picks delivered to your inbox!

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  • That’s Not My Dog…

    That’s Not My Dog…

    That's Not My Dog Book

    That’s Not My Dog…

    The repetitive structure of this book makes it incredibly easy to translate into ANY language, while the textures keep your baby engaged long enough to absorb the vocabulary.

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    About

    A tactile treasure hunt where each page introduces something that belongs to a dog —hairy tummy, shiny tag, fuzzy tongue—until little readers finally find their dog.

    Languages available:

    Format:
    Board Book
    Pages:
    10
    Price:
    £4.28
    Size (cm):
    16,5 x 16,5 x 2
    Publisher:
    Usborne
    Author:
    Fiona Watt
    ISBN:
    978-0746085172

    Why That’s Not My Dog is Perfect for Bilingual Babies

    1. It’s repetitive. The “That’s not my…” pattern is IDENTICAL in dozens of languages. It makes translation easy even for non-English speakers
    2. It’s engaging. Touch-and-feel textures keep babies focused for 5-7 minutes—enough time to introduce 20+ words in your language.
    3. It builds vocabulary. Objects, textures, and adjectives are easier for babies to grasp than abstract concepts. This book nails them all.

    “I didn’t just READ the book to my baby. I used the same phrases during the day, while pointing at the pictures of the dogs, and when he touched different fabrics. The book became a language anchor for our entire day.”

    Maria

    3 Ways to Use This Book

    1. Touch-Translate-Transfer

    Turn 10 minutes of reading into 50 vocabulary touchpoints

    1. Read the page in Language A while baby touches the texture. “That’s not my dog… its tummy is too HAIRY.” Emphasize the texture word. Guide their hand to the smooth bucket.
    2. Immediately repeat in Language B. Same emphasis, same touch. Their brain is connecting: hairy = peludo.
    3. Transfer to real world THAT DAY. When you see a dog outside: “See, a dog! It’s tummy is too hairy!” You’ve just made book vocabulary REAL.

    2. The Texture Hunt Game

    Turn reading time into an active learning game (works from 8 months+)

    1. After reading, say: “Let’s find something BUMPY!”. In Spanish: “¡Vamos a buscar algo RUGOSO!” Take their hand and search the room together.
    2. Find 3 items with that texture. “¡El sofá es rugoso! ¡Tu osito es rugoso! ¡La pared es rugosa!” Each time: touch + word repetition. That’s 3 more exposures to the vocabulary.
    3. Compare back to the book. “Like the digger’s wheels! ¡Como las ruedas del excavador!” You’re building neural pathways between book, word, and world.

    ! Babies need up to 100 exposures to a word before they’ll say it. This technique gives you 15-20 exposures in ONE reading session vs. the 1-2 you’d get from just reading the book once.

    3. Build Anticipation

    After a couple of weeks, when your baby knows the book well, use this to boost active vocabulary

    1. Pause before the texture word and wait. “That’s not my dog… its tummy is too…” [pause and look at baby expectantly]. Some babies will reach for the texture. Some will vocalize. Encourage any type of communication.
    2. Celebrate any attempt. If they touch it: “YES! SMOOTH! ¡SUAVE!” Big reaction = they’ll do it again. If they vocalize: “You said it! Smooth! ¡Suave!” Even if it sounds nothing like the word, you’re rewarding communication.
    3. Hand him the book and say “Can you show mama the dog? ¿Dónde está la pala suave?” They’ll point/touch. This is comprehension testing & interactive play.

    Note that babies need up to 100 exposures to a word before they’ll say it. This technique gives you 15-20 exposures in ONE reading session vs. the 1-2 you’d get from just reading the book once.

    My Recommendation

    ★★★★★

    Worth buying. While not revolutionary, “That’s Not My …” is a good addition to any bilingual baby’s library. It’s durable, affordable, and does exactly what it promises. I’d rate it as “very good” rather than “excellent”. Although it won’t blow your mind, it’ll earn its place on your bookshelf through consistent use.

    Tips. Start the collection about something you can show in real life. Dog, Cat, Teddy, Bus are good first books because babies can make the connections easier. For very small & sensitive babies under 4 months, choose books with soft textures such as Unicorn, Duck or Digger. Dinosaur, Dog have rougher surfaces that might scare your little one.

    Language Simplicity

    5 / 5

    Simple syntax for even non-fluent parents

    Visual Support

    5 / 5

    Strong visual clues help comprehension

    Sensory Engagement

    5 / 5

    5 different textures across the book


    What Works

    + Incredibly durable pages

    + Works perfectly in any language

    + 5 different textures

    + Simple enough for newborns, engaging for toddlers

    + Easy to clean

    + Part of huge collection

    My Concerns

    – Very basic storyline

    – Can become repetitive after 50+ readings

    – Many babies lose interest after 15 months

    Build the Collection

    No Title

    January 9, 2026

    Great book for my child who’s 7 months, she loved it!

    Mother

    Maria Ivanova, Multilingual parent & book reviewer

    Oct 2, 2025

    Where to buy

    I earn a commission if you purchase through these links, at no extra cost to you.

    Join Our Chaos Club

    Unlock the milestones checklist that can be applied to any language. Plus monthly book picks delivered to your inbox!

    ← Back

    Thank you for your response. ✨

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