Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Degrees of Adjectives

Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Degrees of Adjectives
Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Degrees of Adjectives

Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Degrees of Adjectives

Class 3EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Kanishka Modi
Kanishka ModiVisit Profile
I’m an enthusiastic educator with 4 years of experience teaching English, communication skills, and personality development. I’ve guided ICSE, CBSE, and IB students through interactive and practical learning, focusing on building confidence and effective expression. My teaching integrates child psychology principles to create a nurturing and engaging classroom experience.

Compare It Right: Degrees of Adjectives for Class 3 

This Class 3 worksheet helps learners understand how adjectives change form to compare qualities — positive, comparative, and superlative. Through multiple-choice questions, fill-in-the-blanks, matching, error correction, and paragraph writing, students gain fluency in using degree adjectives correctly and confidently.

Why Degrees of Adjectives Matter in Grammar? 

This worksheet helps learners: 
1. Identify the three degrees of adjectives — positive, comparative, and superlative. 
2. Use correct forms like tall, taller, tallest and good, better, best in context. 
3. Spot and fix common grammar errors in degree usage. 
4. Apply comparison words naturally in writing and speech.

What’s Inside This Worksheet? 

This worksheet includes five grammar-based activities:

Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions 
Students choose the correct adjective form to complete sentences like "Ravi is taller than his brother" and "Meera is the brightest girl in her class".

Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks 
Learners fill blanks with adjectives from pairs like "tall/taller", "easy/easier", "hot/hotter", and "thick/thickest".

Exercise 3 – Match the Following 
Students match sentences to the right adjective degree, e.g., "Ravi is stronger than Ramesh" → stronger, "The cake is the sweetest in the shop" → sweetest.

Exercise 4 – Underline the Incorrect Adjective 
Learners identify and correct degree mistakes in sentences such as "Ravi is more taller than his friend" → "Ravi is taller than his friend".

Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing 
Students complete a paragraph using correct degrees of adjectives to describe a school scene, e.g., "Riya was feeling very tired after the long walk to school, while Ravi seemed more tired than her".

✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)

Exercise 1 – MCQs 
1. taller 
2. prettiest 
3. brightest 
4. most interesting 
5. longest 
6. hottest 
7. shorter 
8. better 
9. tallest 
10. best 

Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks 
1. taller 
2. best 
3. easier 
4. hotter 
5. most 
6. higher 
7. highest 
8. longer 
9. thickest 
10. prettier 

Exercise 3 – Match the Following 
1. Ravi is stronger than Ramesh. → stronger 
2. Meera is the best dancer of all. → best 
3. The book is longer than the notebook. → longer 
4. Delhi is hottest in June. → hottest 
5. That was the funniest joke ever. → funniest 
6. The tower is higher than the tree. → higher 
7. She is better at math than me. → better 
8. This is the sweetest cake in the shop. → sweetest 
9. The car is faster than the bike. → faster 
10. He is the strongest boy in the team. → strongest 

Exercise 4 – Error Correction 
1. more taller → taller 
2. most brightest → brightest 
3. more easier → easier 
4. gooder → better 
5. more hottest → hottest 
6. interestinger → more interesting 
7. most smartest → smartest 
8. baddest → worst 
9. highiest → highest 
10. more faster → faster 

Exercise 5 – Sample Paragraph (Answers may vary) 
Riya was feeling very tired after the long walk to school, while Ravi seemed more tired than her. During assembly, the teacher praised Meera for being the most attentive student in the class. Asha’s bag was heavy, but Raj’s bag was heavier. At lunch, the food was tasty, and everyone said it was the most delicious meal they had that week. The cricket match was exciting, but the final over was more thrilling than the earlier ones. The new collection in the library was better than the previous one. Everyone enjoyed a happy afternoon playing and reading together. 

Build your child’s grammar confidence with degrees of adjectives — the key to comparison, precision, and expressive writing! 

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Frequently Asked Questions

Degrees of adjectives show levels of comparison: positive, comparative, and superlative.

Because both compare, but comparative is between two (taller) while superlative is among many (tallest).

By practicing step-by-step exercises comparing words in sentences, building clarity and fluency.

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