Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Possessive Pronouns

Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Possessive Pronouns
Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Possessive Pronouns

Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Possessive Pronouns

Class 3EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Ranjana Pathania
Ranjana PathaniaVisit Profile
I am an educator with over 10 years of teaching experience across CBSE schools, specializing in English, Science, Hindi and History from pre - primary to class 10 and NTT (nursery teachers training) students. A TESOL-certified professional with qualifications in LL.B, B.Ed, and M.Ed, I currently empowers students as a Public Speaking Coach at PlanetSpark, nurturing confident communicators.

Mine, Yours, Theirs: Possessive Pronouns for Class 3  

This Class 3 worksheet introduces learners to possessive pronouns like *mine, yours,* and *theirs*. With fun and practical tasks such as True/False checks, multiple-choice questions, fill in the blanks, rewriting, and paragraph exercises, children practice using possessive pronouns naturally in everyday sentences.  

Why Possessive Pronouns Matter in Grammar?  


Possessive pronouns make sentences shorter and clearer by showing ownership. For Class 3 learners, this topic is important because:  
1. It teaches how to replace repeated nouns with neat pronouns.  
2. It helps in everyday communication, e.g., “This book is mine.”  
3. It reduces mistakes like “This is my book” vs. “This is mine.”  
4. It prepares children for advanced grammar skills in higher grades.  

What’s Inside This Worksheet?  


This worksheet includes five engaging activities designed to build clarity and confidence:  

🧠 Exercise 1 – True or False  
Students check if sentences use possessive pronouns correctly. Example: “This book is mine.”  

✏️ Exercise 2 – Multiple Choice Questions  
Students select the correct possessive pronoun for each sentence. Example: “The red kite is yours.”  

📋 Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks  
Students complete sentences with *mine, yours,* or *theirs.*  

📝 Exercise 4 – Underline & Rewrite  
Students replace repeated nouns with correct pronouns. Example: “The red kite is mine.”  

📖 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing  
Students fill in missing pronouns in a lively conversation at the park.  

✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)  

Exercise 1 – True or False  
1. True  
2. True  
3. True  
4. False  
5. False  
6. True  
7. True  
8. True  
9. False  
10. False  

Exercise 2 – Multiple Choice Questions  
1. The red kite is yours.  
2. Those crayons are theirs.  
3. This umbrella is mine.  
4. That car is theirs.  
5. The pink bag is yours.  
6. These books are mine.  
7. That lunchbox is theirs.  
8. These toys are yours.  
9. This pencil is mine.  
10. That notebook is yours.  

Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks  
1. This bat is mine.  
2. That bag is mine.  
3. These seats are yours.  
4. This book is mine.  
5. Those crayons are theirs.  
6. That scooter is theirs.  
7. These toys are theirs.  
8. This lunchbox is mine.  
9. Those notebooks are theirs.  
10. These shoes are mine.  

Exercise 4 – Underline & Rewrite  
1. The red kite is mine.  
2. The blue bag is yours.  
3. The cricket bat is mine.  
4. The yellow pencils are yours.  
5. The pretty dolls are theirs.  
6. The books are mine.  
7. The football is yours.  
8. The shoes are theirs.  
9. The crayons are mine.  
10. The toys are theirs.  

Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing  
At the park, Riya says, “This ball is **mine**.”  
Ravi smiles, “That bat is **mine**.”  
The children shout, “These toys are **theirs**.”  
Meera shows a book and says, “This story is **mine**.”  
We point at the kites and say, “Those kites are **theirs**.”  
Raju laughs, “The lunchbox is **mine**.”  
Asha claps, “These crayons are **mine**.”  
Raj points to shoes and says, “These shoes are **theirs**.”  
Neha shows her bag and says, “This bag is **mine**.”  
The boys look at bicycles and say, “Those bicycles are **theirs**.”  

Help your child gain confidence in using possessive pronouns correctly with this engaging worksheet that makes grammar easy and fun!  
🔖Book a free trial!
 

Frequently Asked Questions

Possessive pronouns show ownership, like mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs.

Because words like my/your come before nouns, while mine/yours stand alone.

By giving sentence exercises such as "This pen is mine" vs "This is my pen."