Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Demonstrative Pronouns

Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Demonstrative Pronouns
Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Demonstrative Pronouns

Class 3 Grammar Worksheet on Demonstrative 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.

Point It Out: Demonstrative Pronouns for Class 3  

This Class 3 worksheet helps students confidently use demonstrative pronouns — *this, that, these,* and *those.* Through engaging True/False tasks, multiple-choice drills, fill in the blanks, rewriting practice, and a paragraph activity, learners practice showing and pointing to people, objects, and ideas clearly in sentences.  

Why Demonstrative Pronouns Matter in Grammar?  


Demonstrative pronouns are important because they make sentences precise and meaningful. For Class 3 learners, this topic is essential because:  
1. They teach how to refer to things near or far, singular or plural.  
2. They improve sentence clarity in both writing and speaking.  
3. They prevent errors like “This are my shoes” instead of “These are my shoes.”  
4. They strengthen everyday communication skills.  

What’s Inside This Worksheet?  


This worksheet includes five fun activities that build mastery of demonstratives:  

🧠 Exercise 1 – True or False  
Students check if demonstrative pronouns are used correctly. Example: “Those trees are tall and green.”  

✏️ Exercise 2 – Multiple Choice Questions  
Students pick the correct pronoun for each sentence. Example: “This is my new school bag.”  

📋 Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks  
Students complete sentences with *this, that, these,* or *those.*  

📝 Exercise 4 – Underline & Rewrite  
Students replace repeated nouns with demonstrative pronouns. Example: “The toy is broken. The toy is on the floor.” → “The toy is broken. **This** is on the floor.”  

📖 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing  
Students fill in missing pronouns in a lively classroom conversation.  

✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)  

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

Exercise 2 – Multiple Choice Questions  
1. This is my new school bag.  
2. These are our Science project charts.  
3. That is the teacher’s umbrella.  
4. Those are colourful rangoli designs.  
5. That is a very old tree.  
6. These are my favourite pencils.  
7. This is my brother’s cricket bat.  
8. Those are the birds on the wire.  
9. This is our classroom door.  
10. Those are the children playing cricket.  

Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks  
1. This is my red school bag.  
2. That is a cricket bat on the floor.  
3. These are my school friends.  
4. Those are mangoes in the basket.  
5. This is a blue pen from the market.  
6. These are sharp pencils on the desk.  
7. That is a noisy bus near the stop.  
8. Those are old buildings in Chennai.  
9. These are tasty sweets on the plate.  
10. This is a new dress for the party.  

Exercise 4 – Underline & Rewrite  
1. The book has many pictures. **This** is interesting.  
2. The shoes are dirty. **Those** need to be cleaned.  
3. The toy is broken. **This** is on the floor.  
4. The chart is colourful. **That** is on the wall.  
5. The pen is blue. **This** is very thin.  
6. The bag is heavy. **That** is new.  
7. The flowers are in a vase. **These** are beautiful.  
8. The chair needs fixing. **This** is broken.  
9. The bus is late. **That** is crowded.  
10. The shop is small. **That** sells fruits.  

Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing  
In the classroom, I point to my bag and say, “**This** is my school bag.”  
Riya shows crayons and says, “**These** are my crayons.”  
We look at a tree and say, “**That** is a tall tree.”  
Ravi points to the buses and says, “**Those** are our buses.”  
Meera smiles and says, “**This** is my notebook.”  
The teacher holds two books and says, “**These** are storybooks.”  
Raj shows a toy and says, “**This** is my toy.”  
Asha points to the chairs and says, “**Those** are our chairs.”  
I see a shop and say, “**That** is the shop near school.”  
Finally, the children shout, “**These** are our kites.”  

Give your child the tools to speak and write with clarity using this hands-on demonstrative pronouns worksheet — making “this” and “those” easier than ever!  
🔖Book a free trial!
 

Frequently Asked Questions

Demonstrative pronouns point to things: this, that, these, those.

Because both use the same words, but adjectives come before nouns (this book) while pronouns stand alone (this is heavy).

By using pictures and asking questions like "Is this near or far?"