Class 7 Grammar Worksheet on Degrees of Comparison

Class 7 Grammar Worksheet on Degrees of Comparison
Class 7 Grammar Worksheet on Degrees of Comparison

Class 7 Grammar Worksheet on Degrees of Comparison

Class 7EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Ishita Kumar
Ishita KumarVisit Profile
An educator with 10+ years of experience across teaching, training, and curriculum design. Started as a Teach For India fellow and now passionately teaches language, with a Master’s in Physics from IIT Delhi.

Go Beyond Good: Degrees of Comparison (Advanced) for Class 7

This worksheet helps Class 7 learners move beyond simple adjectives to confidently use comparative and superlative forms. From identification and transformation to paragraph writing, it focuses on both regular and irregular degrees with clear usage patterns.

Why Degrees of Comparison Matter in Grammar?

Understanding comparison helps students express differences, extremes, and similarities with accuracy. This topic is essential in Class 7 because:
1. It supports descriptive, narrative, and analytical writing.
2. It clarifies usage of irregular and regular forms.
3. It enhances sentence variation and fluency.
4. It improves editing skills in grammar-based questions.

What’s Inside This Worksheet?

This advanced worksheet features five practice-rich activities to build skill in using comparative language:

🧠 Exercise 1 – Identify the Degree of Comparison  
Students underline the adjective in each sentence and label its degree: positive, comparative, or superlative.

✏️ Exercise 2 – Complete the Adjective Table  
Given partial adjective forms, learners fill in missing degrees across positive, comparative, and superlative categories.

📋 Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blank with the Correct Degree  
Learners complete sentences by choosing the appropriate form—positive, comparative, or superlative—based on context.

📝 Exercise 4 – Spot the Error and Rewrite  
Sentences contain errors in comparison (e.g., double comparatives, wrong superlatives). Students must rewrite them correctly.

📚 Exercise 5 – Picture-Based Paragraph with Mixed Degrees  
Using a visual prompt, learners write a paragraph that includes two positive, two comparative, and two superlative adjectives.

✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)

Exercise 1 – Identify & Label
1. more talented – comparative  
2. best – superlative  
3. tall – positive  
4. good – positive  
5. clearer – comparative  
6. most exciting – superlative  
7. heavier – comparative  
8. hot, humid – positive  
9. narrower – comparative  
10. fastest – superlative

Exercise 2 – Adjective Table

 Positive           Comparative           Superlative  
    tall                     taller                     tallest  
  smart                 smarter                 smartest  
beautiful        more beautiful       most beautiful  
  good                  better                      best  
   bad                   worse                      worst  
  easy                   easier                     easiest  
 strong               stronger                strongest  
 helpful           more helpful          most helpful  
    far                   farther                   farthest  
  cold                   colder                    coldest  

Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
1. easier  
2. good  
3. faster  
4. most interesting  
5. tall  
6. narrower  
7. pleasant  
8. best  
9. heavier  
10. tallest

Exercise 4 – Sentence Correction
1. She is the smartest girl in the class.  
2. This is better than I expected.  
3. He is the best player in the team.  
4. Your idea is better than mine.  
5. That movie is more interesting than any other.  
6. This is the most informative documentary of all three.  
7. Of the two proposals, her idea was clearer.  
8. The Pacific Ocean is deeper than any other ocean.  
9. His second novel is better than any book written by him.  
10. Mount Everest is higher than any other peak in the world.

Exercise 5 – Sample Paragraph
Three boys are racing in a sunny park. The day is bright and warm. The boy in the red shirt looks faster than the others. The boy on the right seems slower. Among them, the tallest boy is also the fastest. It’s one of the most exciting moments as everyone cheers. Their energy is high, and their efforts are the best we’ve seen today.

Includes:
- Positive: bright, warm  
- Comparative: faster, slower  
- Superlative: tallest, most exciting

Help your child master the art of comparison with this well-rounded Class 7 worksheet—perfect for grammar accuracy and writing depth.
🔖Book a free trial!
 

Frequently Asked Questions

It includes positive, comparative, and superlative forms—covering both regular and irregular adjectives.

Yes, it’s ideal for strengthening grammar accuracy and usage across CBSE and ICSE Class 7 syllabi.

Absolutely! It combines sentence-based grammar with paragraph writing for practical application.