

This Class 2 worksheet teaches children how to punctuate short story sentences correctly using periods (.), question marks (?), and exclamation marks (!). Students explore how punctuation shapes the meaning, expression, and flow of a story. Through simple, engaging examples, children learn when to ask, tell, or exclaim—skills that make their reading expressive and their writing clear.
With multiple-choice questions, True/False checks, fill-in-the-blanks, rewriting activities, and a final story-based passage editing task, this worksheet strengthens understanding through repeated, real-world story contexts. Learners gradually develop confidence in choosing the correct ending punctuation to enhance storytelling accuracy.
1. Helps children understand how punctuation changes tone in stories.
2. Builds expressive reading by recognising question, command, and exclamation cues.
3. Supports structured, meaningful writing in early grades.
4. Strengthens foundational grammar skills across subjects.
Exercise 1 – Choose the Correct Ending
Exercise 2 – True or False
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
Exercise 4 – Rewrite Correctly
Exercise 5 – Passage Editing
Exercise 1 – Choose the Correct Ending
1. c
2. a
3. c
4. b
5. a
6. c
7. b
8. a
9. c
10. c
Exercise 2 – True or False
1. False
2. False
3. True
4. True
5. False
6. True
7. True
8. False
9. False
10. False
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
.
?
!
.
.
.
?
!
.
!
Exercise 4 – Rewrite Correctly
We are going home.
This is my school.
Why is the gate closed?
Where is Riya?
Ravi has a new ball.
Can you come here?
What a bright star!
He is my friend.
Are you ready?
Look at the bird!
Exercise 5 – Passage Editing
Aarini wakes up with a big smile, excited for the school day ahead.
She gets ready quickly and packs her books, tiffin, water bottle, and favourite red pencil before stepping out of her room.
Kian waits for her near the gate and calls her name loudly, hoping she hears him.
Are you coming now?
They run happily to the bus stop, talking about the art project they will start today and the fun games they might play later.
What a bright morning it is!
They sit together and look out of the window as the bus rolls through the quiet streets, glowing softly with early sunlight.
Aarini points at the trees, shops, and birds outside, telling Kian how she loves watching everything come alive in the morning during their ride to school.
Help your child master story punctuation and read/write with confident expression!
It helps show pauses, emotions, and dialogue clearly.
They focus on ideas and characters more than marks.
Encourage kids to read their stories aloud to hear natural pauses.