Pronouns — Answer Key
Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1. Jake and I are best friends at our Grade 3 school.
Grade 3 grammar uses 'I' as a subject pronoun, and it is polite to name yourself last.
2. The teacher asked us to clean the whiteboard today.
The object pronoun 'us' follows the verb 'asked' in this Grade 3 sentence.
3. Anna forgot her umbrella on the school bus again.
Grade 3 writers use the possessive pronoun 'her' to show the umbrella belongs to Anna.
4. We are going on a field trip to the zoo tomorrow.
Grade 3 grammar uses 'we' as a subject pronoun that includes the speaker and others.
5. The puppy chewed on its new rubber bone happily.
Grade 3 students use 'its' to show the bone belongs to the puppy, no apostrophe.
6. Dad drove me to soccer practice after dinner.
The object pronoun 'me' follows the verb 'drove' to show who rode along in Grade 3.
7. The students finished their projects before the bell rang.
Grade 3 grammar uses 'their' to show the projects belong to the students, a plural noun.
8. Tell us the story about the brave little mouse.
The object pronoun 'us' follows the verb 'tell' in this Grade 3 sentence.
9. Ricky said he likes pizza better than pasta.
Grade 3 writers use 'he' as a subject pronoun before the verb 'likes' in this sentence.
Part B: Matching
Match each item on the left to the correct answer on the right.
1. Match each item to its correct answer.
Possessive pronoun for a girl
→ her
her
Subject pronoun for one boy
→ he
he
Object pronoun for many people
→ them
them
Possessive pronoun for yourself
→ my
my
Grade 3 students match each description to the correct pronoun: her, he, them, and my.