This second easy worksheet reinforces sentence types using new examples and adds imperative sentences to the mix. Part A asks students to fix three sentences with mismatched end marks, including a command and a question. Part B has four fill-in-the-blank items defining interrogative, imperative, and declarative sentences. Part C offers three true-or-false questions, including one that checks whether students recognize a real interrogative sentence in quotation marks.

Builds confidence with all four types.

Style:
Busy Bee
Types of Sentences
Grade 3
★ Part A: Fix the Sentence
Each sentence has an error. Rewrite it correctly on the line.
1) Fix the sentence:
Please close the door?
Rewrite: Please close the door.
2) Fix the sentence:
That roller coaster was amazing.
Rewrite: That roller coaster was amazing!
3) Fix the sentence:
Do you like chocolate ice cream.
Rewrite: Do you like chocolate ice cream?
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) An interrogative sentence always ends with a question mark.
2) An imperative sentence gives a command or makes a request.
3) A declarative sentence tells someone something and ends with a period.
4) The sentence "What a beautiful day!" is an exclamatory sentence.
★ Part C: True or False?
Read each statement. Circle True or False.
1) An imperative sentence can end with a period.
True
False
2) A declarative sentence always ends with a question mark.
True
False
3) The sentence "How old are you?" is an interrogative sentence.
True
False
🎯

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10 Questions
15-20 minutes
Auto-graded
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