Class 2 Punctuation Worksheet on Placing Commas after Yes, No and Sure

Class 2 Punctuation Worksheet on Placing Commas after Yes, No and Sure
Class 2 Punctuation Worksheet on Placing Commas after Yes, No and Sure

Class 2 Punctuation Worksheet on Placing Commas after Yes, No and Sure

Class 2Spoken EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Aishwarya Vijay
Aishwarya VijayVisit Profile
I’m a former banking and finance professional with 6 years of corporate experience, now a certified educator working at PlanetSpark. After completing my ECCEd and teaching coding at WhiteHat Jr for 2.5 years, I transitioned fully into teaching to build a healthier work–life balance and be more present for my son—while doing work I genuinely love.

Pause with Purpose! Using Commas After Yes, No, and Sure for Class 2

This Class 2 worksheet teaches young learners how to place a comma after the introductory words *Yes*, *No*, and *Sure* when they appear at the beginning of a sentence. Through simple, real-life examples and scaffolded exercises, children learn that these words signal a short pause before the rest of the sentence continues.

With clear explanations embedded through activities, students explore MCQs, True/False checking, comma-insertion tasks, rewriting exercises, and a story-based paragraph where they must add commas meaningfully. These exercises help build strong punctuation habits, improve sentence clarity, and support confident early writing.

Why Placing Commas After Yes, No, and Sure Matters?

Teaching children to use commas after introductory words helps them:
1. Improve readability by showing natural pauses in speech. 
2. Use correct grammar in conversations and written responses. 
3. Build a foundation for more advanced comma rules in higher grades. 
4. Understand how punctuation supports tone and clarity in writing.

What’s Inside This Worksheet?

This worksheet includes five engaging and practical activities:

🧠 Exercise 1 – Choose the Correct Sentence 
Students pick the sentence where the comma is correctly placed after *Yes*, *No*, or *Sure*.

✔️ Exercise 2 – True or False 
Learners identify whether each sentence uses the comma correctly.

✏️ Exercise 3 – Add the Missing Comma 
Students rewrite sentences by inserting a comma after introductory words.

📝 Exercise 4 – Rewrite Correctly 
Children rewrite sentences using proper comma placement.

📖 Exercise 5 – Passage Editing 
A lively morning routine story where students add commas after *Yes*, *No*, and *Sure* throughout the paragraph.

ANSWER KEY

Exercise 1 – Choose the Correct Sentence 
1. b 
2. c 
3. b 
4. c 
5. b 
6. c 
7. b 
8. b 
9. c 
10. c 

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

Exercise 3 – Add the Commas 
1. Yes, I can do this. 
2. No, I am not tired. 
3. Sure, I will help you. 
4. Yes, I saw the bus. 
5. No, I don’t want more. 
6. Sure, we can try. 
7. Yes, I will wait here. 
8. Yes, I like this one. 
9. No, I didn’t hear you. 
10. Sure, I finished it. 

Exercise 4 – Rewrite with Commas 
1. Yes, I can read this. 
2. Sure, I will show you. 
3. Yes, I like the blue one. 
4. No, I do not want that. 
5. No, I forgot my notebook. 
6. Sure, I have some time. 
7. Yes, I understand it. 
8. No, I cannot go now. 
9. Sure, I will call later. 
10. Yes, I know the answer. 

Exercise 5 – Passage Editing (Commas Added) 
Yes, Aanya wakes up early and quickly gets ready for school. 
No, she does not feel sleepy because she had a good night’s rest. 
Sure, she brushes her teeth, packs her tiffin, and checks her timetable for the day. 
Yes, she opens her school bag to make sure all her books are inside. 
No, she does not forget her water bottle today because she kept it near the door. 
Sure, she ties her shoelaces neatly before stepping out of the house. 
Yes, her father asks if she is ready, and she smiles happily. 
No, she says when he asks whether she needs more time. 
Sure, they walk together to the school gate, talking about the interesting day Aanya is looking forward to.

Help your child strengthen everyday writing skills by mastering commas after Yes, No, and Sure—an essential step toward confident punctuation! 

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Frequently Asked Questions

The comma separates the introductory word from the rest of the sentence.

Students rush through writing and skip pauses they naturally use in speech.

Use short dialogues where students punctuate responses like “Yes, I can.”