

This Grade 2 English grammar worksheet focuses on helping young learners understand and correctly use adjectives of number such as some, few, and many in everyday sentences. Designed specially for primary students, it introduces quantity words in a simple, relatable, and age-appropriate manner.
Through a mix of multiple-choice questions, fill-in-the-blanks, matching activities, underlining tasks, and paragraph writing, children learn how adjectives of number change meaning based on context. Each exercise encourages students to observe sentence clues and choose the most suitable word to describe quantity.
This worksheet strengthens grammar foundations by connecting language rules to real-life situations like sharing food, counting objects, or describing groups. It supports classroom teaching, homework practice, and revision while building confidence in sentence construction and reading comprehension.
Adjectives of number help children talk clearly about quantity. For Grade 2 learners, this topic is important because:
1. It teaches them to describe how many things are there.
2. It improves sentence meaning and clarity.
3. It supports reading comprehension and writing accuracy.
4. It builds a strong base for advanced grammar topics.
This worksheet includes five engaging grammar activities:
🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students choose the correct adjective of number (some, few, many) to complete each sentence.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks (Option Pairs)
Students select the correct word from a given pair to complete each sentence meaningfully.
📋 Exercise 3 – Match the Following
Students match sentences to the correct adjective of number from a shuffled list.
📝 Exercise 4 – Underline the Incorrect Word
Students identify and underline the wrong adjective of number used in each sentence.
📖 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing
Students complete a short paragraph using suitable adjectives of number, applying learning in context.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice
1. some
2. few
3. many
4. many
5. few
6. many
7. few
8. some
9. many
10. some
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks (Option Pairs)
1. many
2. few
3. some
4. many
5. many
6. many
7. some
8. few
9. many
10. some
Exercise 3 – Match the Following
1. many
2. few
3. some
4. few
5. many
6. some
7. many
8. some
9. few
10. many
Exercise 4 – Underline the Incorrect Word
1. many
2. some
3. few
4. some
5. many
6. few
7. some
8. many
9. few
10. many
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing
Answers may vary.
Help your child confidently describe quantities and strengthen grammar skills with expert-led learning support.
Adjectives of number tell how many people or things are being talked about, such as some, few, or many.
Children mix them up because some shows an indefinite amount, few means almost none, and many shows a large number.
By using daily examples like counting toys, snacks, or books to show when to use some, few, and many.