Use the arrow keys to move between letters. Press Enter or Space on the first letter of a word, then again on the last letter. Press Escape to cancel.
A few of the words
- SLAPSTICK
- The word traces back to a prop used in old stage comedy — two flat pieces of wood slapped together to make a loud crack whenever a performer took a tumble, amplifying the joke for the back row.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- PILOT
- Before a show ever reached living rooms, a single test episode — the pilot — was produced to convince the network it was worth a full season. Many beloved sitcoms almost never made it past that one audition.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- GUFFAW
- A guffaw is the big, unguarded, full-body laugh — the kind that surprises even the person laughing. Writers always aimed for at least one per episode, knowing it was the laugh audiences would still be talking about the next morning.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- RERUN
- Summer reruns became a tradition in American broadcasting by the 1960s, giving networks a low-cost way to fill the schedule — and giving fans a second chance to catch every joke they missed the first time around.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
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the laugh track word search · free, large-print, no sign-up, printable sitcom puzzle
The Laugh Track: a free large-print word search
The Laugh Track — a free, large-print word search celebrating the joke, the punchline, and the warm glow of a favorite sitcom.
About The Laugh Track
Long before streaming queues, Tuesday night meant something — the sofa pulled close, a familiar theme song drifting from the TV set, and that unmistakable swell of studio laughter arriving right on cue. The American sitcom gave us neighbors who felt like family, living rooms we knew better than some of our own, and punchlines that still land decades later at the dinner table. From the sharp wit of a rapid-fire exchange to the slow burn of a perfectly timed piece of slapstick, the half-hour comedy became a shared ritual woven into the fabric of everyday life.
How to play
- 1Find a word.Tap its first letter, then tap along to its last — the trail fills in and finishes itself when it spells a word. Or press the first letter and drag.
- 2Words run in straight lines.Across and down, and on the harder difficulties diagonally and backwards.
- 3It marks itself.Each word you find takes on its own soft colour on the grid and is crossed off the list.
- 4Choose a difficulty.Relaxed, Classic or Challenging set those directions and how much the word list helps — never the grid size. Tap the A buttons at the top to enlarge the letters, or pinch the grid.
Prefer pen and paper?
A clean, large-print sheet — free, and no sign-up.