This Grade 5 worksheet builds accuracy and fluency in article usage through engaging sentence tasks, story-based fill-ins, and correction exercises. Students sharpen their understanding of “a,” “an,” and “the” with both standalone and paragraph-level practice.
Articles are essential for sentence clarity. In Grade 5, mastering “a,” “an,” and “the” helps students:
1. Apply correct articles based on vowel/consonant sounds.
2. Distinguish between general and specific references.
3. Avoid common article errors in speech and writing.
4. Develop precision in grammar for longer texts.
This 5-part worksheet includes a mix of formats to build confidence:
🔡 Exercise 1 – Fill in the Blanks
Learners complete 15 short phrases using the correct article (e.g., *an honest policeman*, *the Red Fort*).
✍️ Exercise 2 – Sentence Completion
Students fill in articles across 12 real-world sentences with contextual clues.
🔘 Exercise 3 – Multiple Choice
A set of 8 MCQs challenges students to pick the correct article from “a,” “an,” “the,” or “no article.”
📖 Exercise 4 – Paragraph Fill-in
Learners complete a story set at the zoo using 20 article blanks to strengthen contextual accuracy.
🛠️ Exercise 5 – Error Correction
Students rewrite 8 sentences that contain incorrect articles — identifying and correcting each mistake.
Exercise 1
1. an
2. a
3. an
4. a
5. the
6. an
7. an
8. a
9. the
10. a
11. a
12. the
13. an
14. a
15. a
Exercise 2
1. an
2. a
3. a
4. an
5. an
6. the
7. an
8. a
9. an
10. a
11. an
12. an
Exercise 3
1. the
2. an
3. an
4. no article
5. the
6. an
7. no article
8. the
Exercise 4 (Paragraph Answers)
a, the, an, a, a, the, an, an, the, an, the, a, an, the, a, an, the, a, an, the
Exercise 5 (Corrected Sentences)
1. She ate an orange during lunch.
2. We visited the India Gate last year.
3. Rahul saw a tiger in the jungle book.
4. Alka bought a pencil from the shop.
5. I saw an elephant at the village fair.
6. The sun was shining brightly in the sky.
7. Grandma told us an amazing story.
8. They crossed the Yamuna River on a boat.
Build article confidence with fun sentence tasks, paragraph practice, and correction drills — all in one place.
A is used for consonant sounds, an for vowel sounds, and the for specific known nouns.
Use 'a' or 'an' based on the adjective's sound; 'the' is often used before proper nouns with modifiers.
Because rules depend on sound, not just spelling, and exceptions can confuse learners.