

Class 3 English Worksheet on Quantitative Adjectives – Number and Quantity Words
Count It Right with Quantitative Adjectives: Practical Grammar for Class 3
This Grade 3 Quantitative Adjectives Worksheet teaches learners how to describe the number or amount of people, places, animals, and things using adjectives. Through activities like coloring, sentence rewriting, and picture-based writing, students build confidence in using words that answer “how many?” and “how much?”
Why Quantitative Adjectives Matter in Grammar?
Quantitative adjectives are essential for measurement and quantity. For Grade 3 students, learning to use these words is important because:
1. It helps students specify amounts clearly in speech and writing.
2. It strengthens math-integrated language skills.
3. It supports reading comprehension with number-related descriptions.
4. It promotes detailed, functional communication.
What’s Inside This Worksheet?
This worksheet includes five interactive grammar-building tasks:
🖍️ Exercise 1 – Color the Adjectives
Learners identify and color all the words that express quantity or amount.
🔍 Exercise 2 – Underline the Quantitative Adjective
Students underline the word in each sentence that tells how many or how much.
✏️ Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
Children complete sentences by inserting suitable quantitative adjectives.
📝 Exercise 4 – Rewrite the Sentence
Each sentence is rewritten with an added word to describe amount or number, and learners underline the word they added.
🖼️ Exercise 5 – Picture-Based Writing
Students observe a birthday scene and write five sentences, each containing a quantitative adjective to describe what they see.
✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)
Exercise 1 – Color the Quantitative Adjectives
Words to color:
twenty, few, much, hundred, one, many, every, three, some, several, eight, all, ten
Exercise 2 – Underline the Quantitative Adjective
1. some
2. two
3. many
4. few
5. several
6. half
7. each
8. most
9. all
10. ten
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks (Sample Answers)
1. many
2. seven
3. some
4. few
5. many
6. all
7. most
8. some
9. several
10. ten
Exercise 4 – Rewritten Sentences (Sample Answers)
1. Few children are playing in the park.
2. She bought three oranges from the market.
3. There are many stars in the sky.
4. The students answered several questions.
5. He has ten pencils in his box.
6. We saw six parrots on the tree.
7. They brought some snacks for the picnic.
8. I finished all work before lunch.
9. My friend gave me five stickers.
10. Three ducks swim in the pond.
Exercise 5 – Picture-Based Sentences (Sample Answers)
1. There are three children at the party.
2. The table has one big cake.
3. I can see five gift boxes.
4. There are four balloons in the room.
5. Each child has one party hat on.