Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (2024)

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Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (1)

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By

Beverly Hernandez

Beverly Hernandez

Homeschooling Expert

Beverly Hernandez is a veteran homeschooler and the former administrator of a large independent study program.

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Updated on December 05, 2018

Mardi Gras is the official state holiday ofLouisiana, but countries around the world, such as Brazil and Italy, also celebrate it.

The holidaytraces its origins back to fertility festivals, such as the Feast of Lupercalia. (Valentine's Dayalso has roots in this Roman holiday.)

Mardi Gras is celebrated the day before Lent begins. Lent is a Christian time of preparation during the 40 days leading up to Easter. Because the Paschal full moon determines the date of Easter, both it and the beginning of Lent varies. Although the date changes, the start of Lent always falls on a Wednesday and is called Ash Wednesday.

The observance of Lent requires dietary restrictions such as abstinence from meat, eggs, milk, and cheese. Historically, people observing the time of preparation would try to use up all of these restricted foods on the day before Ash Wednesday. This day became known as Fat Tuesday or Mardi Gras, the French phrase meaning Fat Tuesday.

Today, people celebrate Mardi Gras with parades, parties, and masquerade balls. Parties usually include a king cake, a coffee cake containing a hidden bead. Tradition says that the person who finds the bead must host the party the following year.

Pancakes are also a traditional Mardi Gras food since they use ingredients such as milk, eggs, and butter, which are all foods that Lenten observers must purge from their homes.

During Mardi Gras parades, it's customary for the people on the parade floats to toss out colorful plastic beads and plastic coins, known as doubloons. Parades are organized by krewes, associations that put on a parade or ball for Mardi Gras.

Use the following free printables to teach your students more about Louisiana's state holiday.

01

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Mardi Gras Vocabulary

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (3)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Vocabulary Sheet

Introduce your students to Mardi Gras with thisvocabulary worksheet featuring terms associated with the holiday.

Do your students know what the aluminum coins given out by carnival organizations are called? Do they know what name is given to the day before Mardi Gras?
Have them use the Internet or a dictionary to look up and definethe Mardi Gras related words.

02

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Mardi Gras Wordsearch

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (4)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Word Search

Students can review the terms they've learned by looking for them in this Mardi Gras word search. Words like like "king cake" and "throws" can be found among the jumbled letters of the puzzle.

03

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Mardi Gras Crossword Puzzle

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (5)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Crossword Puzzle

This fun crossword puzzle allows students to continue reviewing the terms associated with Mardi Gras. Each clue describes a word associated with the celebration.

04

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Mardi Gras Challenge

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (6)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Challenge

Use thisshort multiple choice quiz to see how well your students remember what they've learned about Mardi Gras. Each description is followed by four multiple choice options.

05

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Mardi Gras Alphabetizing Activity

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (7)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Alphabet Activity

Young children can practice their alphabetizing skills by writing these Mardi Gras themed words in correct alphabetical order on the blank lines provided.

06

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Mardi Gras Bookmarks and Pencil Toppers

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (8)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Mardi Gras Bookmarks and Pencil Toppers Page

Students can use these Mardi Gras themed bookmarks and pencil toppers to create an air of festivity in their home or classroom.

Children should cut out the bookmarks along the solid lines. They can cut out the pencil toppers, punch holes on the tabs, and insert a pencil through the holes.

For best results, print the bookmarks and pencil toppers on card stock.

07

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Mardi Gras Draw and Write

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (9)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Draw and Write.

Allow students to showcase their creativity and practice their handwriting and composition skills with this activity. Children should draw a Mardi Gras related picture and use the blank lines to write about their drawing.

08

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Mardi Gras Theme Paper

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (10)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Theme Paper.

Children can use this colorful theme paper to write about their favorite part of Mardi Gras or to write a report showcasing what they've learned about the celebration.

09

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Mardi Gras Coloring Page - Mask

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (11)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras Coloring Page

Introduce your children to the fact that colorful masks and headdresses are a well-known feature of the Mardi Gras celebration as they color this picture.

10

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Mardi Gras Coloring Page - Balloons

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (12)

Print the pdf: Mardi Gras coloring Page

Explain to children that parades and celebrations are a huge part of Mardi Gras as they color this picture.

Updated by Kris Bales

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Your Citation

Hernandez, Beverly. "Mardi Gras Printables." ThoughtCo, Aug. 27, 2020, thoughtco.com/mardi-gras-printables-1832866.Hernandez, Beverly. (2020, August 27). Mardi Gras Printables. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/mardi-gras-printables-1832866Hernandez, Beverly. "Mardi Gras Printables." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/mardi-gras-printables-1832866 (accessed March 12, 2024).

Learn About Mardi Gras with Free Printables (2024)

FAQs

What is the true meaning of Mardi Gras? ›

Mardi Gras, festive day celebrated in France on Shrove Tuesday (the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday), which marks the close of the pre-Lenten season. The French name Mardi Gras means Fat Tuesday, from the custom of using all the fats in the home before Lent in preparation for fasting and abstinence.

What's the difference between Carnival and Mardi Gras? ›

Carnival is a Season; Mardi Gras is a day.

Technically, “Mardi Gras” is the last Tuesday before Ash Wednesday and ushers in 40 days of best behavior during Lent, and “Carnival” is the season that begins on the Feast of Epiphany, January 6.

What is the day before Mardi Gras called? ›

What is Lundi Gras? The Monday immediately before Mardi Gras Day – also called Lundi Gras, “Fat Monday,” or “Shrove Monday” – holds its own ever-evolving traditions and celebrations.

Why is it called Fat Tuesday? ›

The last day of Shrovetide, Mardi Gras (Fat Tuesday), is named as such "because people felt bloated having eaten up all the rich foods before Lent" in order to prepare for the coming season of repentance.

What does krewe stand for? ›

A krewe (pronounced "crew") is a social organization that stages parades and/or balls for the Carnival season.

What is a Fat Tuesday drink? ›

Malibu Rum + 151 Rum + Piña Colada.

Where did Fat Tuesday originate? ›

Mardi Gras (French for Fat Tuesday) dates back to an ancient Roman festival honoring the deities Lupercalia and Saturnalia which took place in mid-February. When Christians arrived in Rome, they incorporated the festival into Lenten preparations.

What is Zulu and Rex? ›

It includes the tradition of Rex, king of the New Orleans carnival, and Zulu King arriving by boat. This began in 1874, but the term Lundi Gras (French for "Fat Monday") was not widely applied until 1987 when the arrival was brought back as part of a series of river-related events under the name of "Lundi Gras".

What is the French word for Fat Monday? ›

French for Fat Monday, Lundi Gras is the day before Mardi Gras.

Is it Fat Tuesday or Shrove Tuesday? ›

Fat Tuesday is also called Shrove Tuesday. According to the Diocese of Little Rock, Shrove Tuesday comes from the term “to shrive,” meaning “to confess,” or to hear confessions–a way to prepare our hearts for the beginning of Lent dating back to the Middle Ages.

What is the day before Ash Wednesday called? ›

Shrove Tuesday, the day immediately preceding Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent in Western Christian churches.

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