Simple, Compound, and Complex Sentences will help students practice this key third grade skill. Try our free exercises to build knowledge and confidence.
Don't make things tense in your classroom when learning the difference between present and past tense verbs. These exercises allow your students to practice matching subjects and verbs independently.
Test your students with these exercises that have them identify simple, compound, and complex sentences. Helpful hints give your students all the information they need to work through the problems on their own.
Teach your third grader the importance of subject pronouns and noun-pronoun agreement with these exercises that are specifically developed for their age group.
Teach your students everything they need to know about proper nouns to succeed in their future writing careers with this exercise that gives them additional practice while providing helpful hints!
Relative pronouns make it simple for your fourth grader to describe the subject of a sentence in a fluid and orderly way. Give them the practice they need with these exercises and helpful hints.
Students will finally have a name to describe the “dog ate my homework” storytelling that runs rampant throughout childhood with this hyperbole exercise.
Creating compound sentences can be confusing for fourth graders to learn, but this lesson can be made easy with interactive exercises and helpful hints found here.
For students practicing their grammar, the following Education.com grammar exercises offer an opportunity to easily develop a solid foundation forming sentences. Additional help comes in the form of parts of speech exercises that distinguish between the various components of a sentence. After students work through these exercises, they will be able to identify the differences between not only nouns and adjectives, but make finer distinctions, such as between adverbs and verbs.
Good grammar isn't just "who" vs "whom" or moving dangling modifiers -- it can be as simple as writing a short sentence or identifying a verb. Understanding grammar basics is the foundation of language mastery, and learning it gets started early. Education.com's grammar exercises have everything you need to keep your child on the road to writing and reading smarts. To start, try some of our many online exercises to practice basics like parts of speech or kinds of sentences, then move up to more complex skills like subject-verb agreement or possessive pronouns. No matter what level of learning your child is at, we have something for them in our online grammar exercises. Choose from fill-in quizzes, multiple-choice drills, and more hands-on, mix and match activities. With our online grammar exercises, language arts practice is a breeze, a cinch, and in the bag. From first to fifth grade, Education.com has your grammar learning needs covered.