3rd Grade Grammar Worksheets
Our free, printable 3rd grade grammar worksheets help kids hit the height of grammatical precision through exercises on nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and more. Build young learners' knowledge of the rules in English for changing the form of words and joining them into sentences.
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Explore Third Grade Grammar Worksheets
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- All
- Adjectives
- Adverbs
- Articles
- Capitalization
- Conjunctions
- Contractions
- Determiners and Quantifiers
- Diagramming Sentences
- Double Negatives
- Nouns
- Parts of Speech
- Prepositions
- Pronouns
- Punctuation
- Question Words
- Sentences for Beginners
- Simple, Compound, and Complex Sentences
- Subject and Predicate
- Subject-Verb Agreement
- Tenses
- Transition Words
- Types of Sentences
- Verbs
Identifying Subjects and Predicates
Subjects are often a word or two, and the remaining sentence forms the predicate. Remember this as you circle the subjects and underline the predicates here.
Choosing Verbs That Match Subjects
Introduce a singular verb to match a singular subject, and bring on board a plural verb to suit a plural subject. Choose from the options in parentheses.
Simple Past Tense of Irregular Verbs
Children must practice a lot to be successful at forming the simple past of irregular verbs. The verbs are given in parentheses, so kids need to only convert them into the past sentence.
Take 3rd grade grammar practice from monotonous to refreshing by identifying the time order word or phrase in each sentence. Some time order words indicate the past, some the present, and some the future tense.
Identifying Sentences as Declarative, Interrogative, Imperative, and Exclamatory
Flash forward kids' preparation on identifying types of sentences in this set that tasks them with identifying if each sentence is a declarative, interrogative, imperative, or exclamatory sentence.
Completing Sentences Choosing Nouns and Verbs
Some sentences here require nouns, while some need verbs, as directed. Choose from the nouns and verbs given in the word box, making these exercises twice as easy.
Identifying Adjectives and Their Nouns
Accomplish this task by identifying the adjective and the noun it describes or adds details to. Once the identifying is done and over with, underline the adjective and circle the noun modified.
While adverbs often tend to work harder and multitask, they are more known for what they do in these worksheets, where they give more information about verbs.
Completing Sentences with A or An
While most sentences here require either a or an, there are some that need both, making choosing between the two indefinite articles to complete each sentence here a completely grammatically rewarding affair.
Capitalization - Two-Part Practice
First, write a few days of the week, months, and holidays beginning with a capital letter; follow this up with reading sentences and rewriting them by capitalizing as many words as required.