Language is emphasised in students’ performance with factions. We seek to examine how students use both mathematical and everyday language when working with fractions and explore how these linguistic resources are interconnected with their reasoning processes. We designed a written task on fraction magnitude comparisons for students aged 11-12 years. The task required students to order six fractions with different denominators from smallest to greatest and explain their response. In this presentation, we examine 18 students’ written responses to the task. We initially observed the use of fraction-specific vocabulary and everyday language expressions for fractions. we also paid attention to action verbs and phrases, given that justifying is a reasoning process. Three categories of verbs emerged: fraction-related, descriptive, and meta-level. Based on these initial findings, we will share more students’ language and open a space to explore analytical approaches for interpreting the language.