Class 7 English Grammar Worksheet on All Determiners



Class 7 English Grammar Worksheet on All Determiners

Master the Markers: Determiner Practice for Class 7
This worksheet builds foundational grammar skills in Class 7 learners by helping them identify and use determiners like articles, demonstratives, possessives, quantifiers, and numbers. Through structured exercises and paragraph-level application, students sharpen accuracy in both sentence construction and grammar correction.
Why Determiners Matter in Grammar?
Understanding determiners helps learners:
1. Modify nouns clearly and grammatically in writing.
2. Use language more precisely in academic writing and speech.
3. Distinguish between different types of determiners for better grammar control.
4. Correct common errors with articles, quantities, and ownership in real-world usage.
What’s Inside This Worksheet?
This worksheet includes nine engaging and well-scaffolded grammar exercises:
📝 Exercise 1 – Fill in the Articles
Students choose the correct article (*a*, *an*, *the*) to complete each sentence naturally and accurately.
👆 Exercise 2 – Use the Right Demonstrative
Learners fill in each blank using *this*, *that*, *these*, or *those*, based on visual or grammatical context.
🔢 Exercise 3 – Quantifier Selection
Each sentence presents two quantifier options (e.g., *much/many*, *some/any*) — students select and underline the correct one.
✍️ Exercise 4 – Possessive Determiner Correction
Students identify and correct wrongly used possessive determiners (e.g., *her*, *his*, *their*) in context.
🔠 Exercise 5 – Number Determiners
Fill-in-the-blanks using either ordinal (e.g., *first*, *third*) or cardinal numbers (e.g., *two*, *five*).
📖 Exercise 6 – Paragraph Correction
Learners edit a paragraph filled with determiner mistakes, rewriting it with proper grammar and clarity.
🔍 Exercise 7 – Underline the Determiners
Students identify and underline one or more determiners in each sentence, reinforcing recognition skills.
🗂 Exercise 8 – Label the Type of Determiner
Each sentence contains a determiner that learners must classify: article, demonstrative, possessive, quantifier, or number.
🚫 Exercise 9 – Odd One Out
From groups of four words, students circle the one that is **not** a determiner (e.g., *mango* in “a / the / mango / an”).
✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)
Exercise 1 – Articles
1. an
2. an
3. the
4. a
5. an
6. the
7. an
8. a
9. a
10. an
Exercise 2 – Demonstratives
1. This
2. These
3. that
4. That
5. These
6. That
7. These
8. This
9. Those
10. This
Exercise 3 – Quantifiers
1. many
2. few
3. much
4. some
5. any
6. many
7. little
8. more
9. more
10. some
Exercise 4 – Possessive Determiners (Corrections)
2. My brother lost **his** keys.
4. Her cousin forgot **his** phone at home.
6. I found **my** water bottle in your bag.
8. My aunt made **our** favourite laddoos.
(Other sentences are already correct.)
Exercise 5 – Number Determiners
1. two, three
2. second
3. five, six
4. tenth
5. third
6. fifth
7. seven
8. first
9. four
10. two
Exercise 6 – Paragraph Correction
Yesterday my uncle took me to **the** market. He gave me a list with some items to buy. We needed **vegetables** like **onions**, **potatoes**, and **tomatoes**. I also bought **some** sugar, some milk, and a bag of rice. My cousin Rina brought **her** water bottle and **our** shopping bag. **These** are the things we usually buy on Sunday. It was **the** best morning.
Exercise 7 – Underline the Determiners
1. a, a
2. This, my
3. three, my
4. His, the
5. many, the
6. Those
7. my
8. much
9. Our, the
10. That, the
Exercise 8 – Determiner Type
1. Article
2. Demonstrative
3. Possessive
4. Number
5. Quantifier
6. Demonstrative
7. Article
8. Possessive
9. Article
10. Quantifier
Exercise 9 – Not a Determiner (Circle)
1. mango
2. them
3. walked
4. we
5. juice
6. mine
7. she
8. yours
9. there
10. had
Support your child’s grammar foundation with this comprehensive worksheet on all five types of determiners!
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Frequently Asked Questions
Determiners are words like some, any, few, the that come before nouns to give information.
By grouping them—articles, quantifiers, demonstratives—and practicing with noun phrases.
Because English determiners often don’t have direct equivalents in other languages, causing confusion.