Class 6 Grammar Worksheet on Determiners

Class 6 Grammar Worksheet on Determiners
Class 6 Grammar Worksheet on Determiners

Class 6 Grammar Worksheet on Determiners

Class 6EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Tanishka Sharma
Tanishka SharmaVisit Profile
English teacher with 2 years of expertise from teaching in both IB and CBSE schools.

Use the Right Helper Words: All Types of Determiners for Class 6  


This Grade 6 worksheet gives students a complete introduction to determiners—words like *a, some, my, each, which* that come before nouns. With fun grammar activities including underlining, blanks, sentence correction, and original sentence creation, learners explore different types of determiners and how they work.

Why Determiners Matter in Grammar?  


Determiners are essential for sentence structure and meaning. For Grade 6 learners, this topic is important because:  
1. Determiners tell us which one, whose, how many, or how much.  
2. They include articles, demonstratives, possessives, interrogatives, quantifiers, and distributives.  
3. They help students form clearer, more specific sentences.  
4. They build foundational grammar skills needed for writing and speaking.

What’s Inside This Worksheet?  


This worksheet includes five well-designed exercises that teach and apply six types of determiners:

🧠 Exercise 1 – Underline the Determiner and Label Its Type  
Students underline one determiner per sentence and write whether it's an article, demonstrative, possessive, quantifier, interrogative, or distributive.  
E.g., “That house is very old.” → *That* – Demonstrative

✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks  
Learners choose the correct determiner from brackets to complete each sentence. Options include *a/an*, *some/few*, *which/what*, *my/me*, *these/this*, etc.

📋 Exercise 3 – Rewrite with Correct Determiners  
Each sentence contains an incorrect or awkward determiner. Students rewrite it correctly (e.g., “He doesn’t have much pencils.” → “He doesn’t have many pencils.”)

📝 Exercise 4 – Sentence Creation  
Students write one sentence each using the following determiner types: article, quantifier, demonstrative, possessive, distributive, and interrogative.

✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)

Exercise 1 – Underlined and Labeled Determiners       Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks  
1. That – Demonstrative                                                1. These  
2. some – Quantifier                                                      2. a  
3. her – Possessive                                                       3. my  
4. Those – Demonstrative                                             4. which  
5. My – Possessive                                                        5. several  
6. Which – Interrogative                                                6. the  
7. a – Article                                                                   7. your  
8. any – Quantifier                                                         8. its  
9. This – Demonstrative                                                 9. all  
10. His – Possessive                                                     10. some  

Exercise 3 – Corrected Sentences  
1. He doesn’t have **many** pencils.  
2. She ate **some** biscuits.  
3. **Those** books are on the table.  
4. We saw **an** elephant at the zoo.  
5. **Which one** do you want?  
6. **All** the children were present.  
7. Do you have **any** questions?  
8. **These** cats are cute.  
9. I don’t want **much** sugar.  
10. He lost **his** pen.

Exercise 4 – Sample Sentences  
1. Article: I read **an** interesting story.  
2. Quantifier: She has **some** candy in her bag.  
3. Demonstrative: **These** cookies are fresh.  
4. Possessive: **My** brother is playing cricket.  
5. Distributive: **Each** student brought their notebook.  
6. Interrogative: **Which** color do you like best?

Help your child master determiners today with a Free 1:1 Communication Skills Trial Class at PlanetSpark.  
🔖Book a free trial!
 

Frequently Asked Questions

Determiners are words that come before nouns to clarify which one, whose, how many, or how much—helping students write clearer and more accurate sentences.

Yes, it includes six categories: articles, demonstratives, possessives, interrogatives, quantifiers, and distributives.

Absolutely—it provides scaffolded tasks and answer keys that students can use for self-guided learning.