4th Grade Worksheet Bundle
4th Grade Worksheet Bundle
4th Grade Worksheet Bundle
What is the relationship between the value of the 4 in the square and the value of the 4 in the circle in
the number above?
A. The value of the 4 in the circle is 100 times the value of the 4 in the square.
B. The value of the 4 in the square is 10 times the value of the 4 in the circle.
C. The value of the 4 in the circle is 10 times the value of the 4 in the square.
D. The value of the 4 in the square is 100 times the value of the 4 in the circle.
Question 2 .
What is the relationship between the value of the 4 in the square and the value of the 4 in the circle in
the number above?
A. The value of the 4 in the square is 10 times the value of the 4 in the circle.
B. The value of the 4 in the square is 100 times the value of the 4 in the circle.
C. The value of the 4 in the circle is 10 times the value of the 4 in the square.
D. The value of the 4 in the circle is 100 times the value of the 4 in the square.
Question 3 .
B. 300
C. 3
D. 30
Which equation correctly compares the tens place and ones place in 8,888?
A. 80 ÷ 8 = 10
B. 8,000 ÷ 80 = 100
C. 800 ÷ 8 = 100
D. 800 ÷ 80 = 10
Question 5 .
Which equation correctly compares the tens place and ones place in 9,999?
A. 90 ÷ 9 = 10
B. 900 ÷ 9 = 100
C. 900 ÷ 90 = 10
D. 9,000 ÷ 90 = 100
Question 6 .
Question 7 .
B. 7,000
C. 7
D. 700
Question 8 .
B. 90
C. 900
D. 90,000
What is the relationship between the value of the 9 in the square and the value of the 9 in the circle in
the number above?
A. The value of the 9 in the circle is 100 times the value of the 9 in the square.
B. The value of the 9 in the square is 10 times the value of the 9 in the circle.
C. The value of the 9 in the square is 100 times the value of the 9 in the circle.
D. The value of the 9 in the circle is 10 times the value of the 9 in the square.
Question 10 .
Which equation correctly compares the thousands place and hundreds place in 66,666?
A. 600 ÷ 6 = 100
C. 6,000 ÷ 600 = 10
D. 60,000 ÷ 6,000 = 10
1. B
2. A
3. B
4. A
5. A
6. --
7. A
8. D
9. B
10. C
Since 400 = 40 × 10, the value of the 4 in the square is 10 times the value of the 4 in the circle.
Since 4,000 = 400 × 10, the value of the 4 in the square is 10 times the value of the 4 in the circle.
To find the number that is 10 times 30, add another 0 to the end of 30.
4. In 8,888, the value of the tens place is 80 and the value of the ones place is 8. To compare using division, divide the value of the tens place,
80, by the ones place, 8.
The value in the tens place is ten times the value in the ones place. So, the equation that correctly compares the tens and ones place is
80 ÷ 8 = 10.
5. In 9,999, the value of the tens place is 90 and the value of the ones place is 9. To compare using division, divide the value of the tens place,
90, by the ones place, 9.
The value in the tens place is ten times the value in the ones place.
So, the equation that correctly compares the tens place and ones place is 90 ÷ 9 = 10.
Since 5 tens times 1 ten is equal to 5 hundreds, then 5 hundreds is ten times the size of 5 tens
To find the number that is 10 times 9,000, add another 0 to the end of 9,000.
Since 900 = 90 × 10, the value of the 9 in the square is 10 times the value of the 9 in the circle.
10. In 66,666, the value of the thousands place is 6,000 and the value of the hundreds place is 600. To compare using division, divide the value of
the thousands place, 6,000, by the hundreds place, 600.
The value in the thousands place is ten times the value in the hundreds place.
So, the equation that correctly compares the thousands place and hundreds place is 6,000 ÷ 600 = 10.
dessert:
desert:
3 Write the irregular past tense of these verbs. Example: fly flew.
Spelling Challenge Use the letters in this word to make new words.
c o m f o r t a b l e
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Score five points for each correct word.
My score:
Worksheet B
1 sword, piece, breath, meters, women
2 at a loose end: having nothing to do; feeling blue: feeling sad, unhappy,
glum; frighten off: scare something away; phase in: introduce something
slowly into use; comb the area: search for carefully
4 Animal: snake, fowl, raven; Person: woman, mayor, miner; Thing: oar, sword,
radio
c o m f o r t a b l e
Spelling Challenge
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
3 letters: ace, act, arc, are, arm, art, ate, bam, bar, bat, bet, boa, bra, cab, car, cat,
cob, coo, cot, ear, eat, elf, elm, era, far, fat, foe, for, fro, lab, let, lot, mat, met, mob,
moo, oaf, oar, oat, orb, ore, ram, rat, rob, roe, rot, tab, tar, tea, toe, too
4 letters: able, acre, aloe, atom, bale, balm, bare, beam, bear, beat, belt, blot, boar,
boat, bolt, boom, boot, bore, brat, cafe, calf, calm, came, care, cart, clot, coal,
coat, colt, comb, come, cool, core, corm, crab, cram, earl, face, fact, fame, fare,
farm, fate, fear, feat, felt, flab, flat, flea, foal, foam, fool, foot, fore, form, fort, fret,
from, lace, lamb, lame, late, leaf, left, loaf, lobe, loft, loom, loot, lore, mace, male,
malt, mare, mart, mate, meal, meat, melt, moat, mole, moor, moot, more, oboe, oral,
race, raft, rate, real, ream, roam, robe, role, roof, room, root, taco, tale, tame, teal,
team, tear, term, tomb, tool, tore, tram
5 letters: abort, actor, afoot, after, alert, aloft, aloof, alter, amber, amble, blame,
blare, bleat, bloat, bloom, brace, broom, cable, camel, carol, cater, clear, cleft,
cobra, comet, coral, craft, crate, cream, fable, facet, farce, feral, flame, flare, float,
floor, flora, focal, force, forte, frame, later, metal, metro, molar, moral, motel, motor,
react, realm, robot, table, taboo, tamer, trace
Punctuation
Read each sentence below. Decide which kind of punctuation mark is missing and should be used.
Circle the correct choice.
4. My father can point out all of the constellations in the night sky
A. period
B. comma
C. exclamation point
D. question mark
7. Our teacher told us not to look at the answers in the back of the book
A. period
B. question mark
C. comma
D. exclamation point
8. Do you think that it’s okay to constantly bully your sister?” asked Dad.
A. period
B. quotation mark
C. question mark
D. exclamation point
3. A
4. A
5. C
6. C
7. A
8. B
9. D
10. B
B. lines 2 and 4
C. lines 1 and 4
D. lines 1 and 2
Question 3 .
shone/spring
nose/noble
lay/gray
feeling/squealing
little/bushy
Yellow balloon
Red and maroon
Mom and I blow them up
Tiny cupcakes
Cream cheese snowflakes
Mom and I decorate
It's my birthday
Mom and I play
Till my friends make their way
C. it has similes.
D. of what it is about.
Question 5 .
Inauguration Day is the day where a new president takes office. Over the years, many
customs have been added. Now, the new president is a very busy person on this day. He
starts off his day with a morning church service. Then, he goes to the White House to meet
with the president who is leaving office. When they are done, they leave for the U.S. Capitol
together. There, the new president takes an oath. He promises that he will carry out his duties
the best he can.
What type of writing is this?
A. drama
B. fiction prose
C. poetry
D. nonfiction prose
Question 7 .
B. 3
C. 4
D. 2
An ant is crawling
On my tomato plant
I think to myself
What could it really want?
B. It has a meter.
C. It has a rhythm.
Question 9 .
Now, I am awake
Staring at the lake
Outside my window
Where did the night go?
Which of these is true about this poem?
A. The poem lacks a meter.
1. C
2. B
3. --
4. A
5. B
6. D
7. C
8. D
9. B
10. B
1. In poetry, some syllables sound louder or stronger than the others. That is what gives a poem or verse its meter. Meter is the pattern of which
syllables sound strong and which ones do not. A stanza is a group of lines in a poem. Read the poem out loud. The first and the third stanza
have the same meter. The odd lines have four beats; the even lines have three beats. In the second stanza, all the lines have three beats. For
example, the third stanza sounds like: (Ta-DUH-da-DUH-da-DUH-da-DUH / ta-DUH-da-DUH-da-DUH / Ta-DUH-da-DUH-da-DUH-da-
DUH / ta-DUH-da-DUH-da-DUH) Our DADDy LIKES the FERRis WHEEL/ Do NOT ask HOW I FEEL! / Now, I am TALL eNOUGH for
IT / I AM scared JUST a BIT.
2. In poetry, some syllables sound louder or stronger than the others. That's what gives a poem its meter. Meter is the pattern of which syllables
sound strong and which ones do not. When you read the second and the fourth lines out loud, they sound like "Ta-DUH-da-DUH-da-DUH"
("And PLAY with BOB the CAT"). The second and the fourth lines in this poem both have three beats!
3. Unlike prose, poems often use rhythm and words that rhyme. Hence, the words feeling and squealing, and lay and gray are examples of
rhyming words found in poetry.
4. Poetry is known for the way it uses rhymes. In each stanza of this poem, the first two lines end in the same rhyme. Remember that similes
compare two unlike things using words "like" and "as." This poem does not have similes.
5. Many poems have a rhythm. A poet can create rhythm by making certain lines contain the same number of syllables. In this poem, all of the
lines have the same rhythm. They have six syllables each.
6. Nonfiction text gives facts and true information. This passage gives facts and information about Inauguration Day. The passage is prose
because it is written in sentences and paragraphs. It uses normal everyday language.
7. In poetry, some syllables sound louder or stronger than the others. That is what gives a poem its meter. Meter is the pattern of which syllables
sound strong and which ones do not. Read the fifth line out loud. It sounds like "Ta-DUH-da-DUH-da-DUH-da-DUH" ("I POURED some
KETCHup ON my DRESS"). The fifth line has four beats in it! All the lines in this poem, except the repeated line, have the same number of
syllables.
8. Poems are known for the way they use lines. This poem does not use similes. Not all poems have a fixed meter or a strong rhythm in all the
stanzas.
9. Many poems have a rhythm. A poet can create rhythm by making certain lines contain the same number of syllables. In this poem, all of the
lines have the same rhythm. Can you tell how many syllables there are in each line?
10. A stanza is a group of lines in a poem. Just like a story or an essay has paragraphs, a poem has stanzas. The poem has two stanzas which have
four lines each.
3 Word Factory
Name ___________________________________________________ Date _______________________
cl b g f t ________________ ________________
________________ ________________
ow ou ir ur
________________ ________________
n d l st
________________ ________________
_____________ _____________ ______________ _____________ _____________
_____________ _____________ ______________ _____________ _____________
_____________ _____________ ______________ _____________ _____________
3 Word Factory
Name ___________________________________________________ Date _______________________
1 Write the compound words. Read them to a friend.
Spelling Challenge Use the letters in this word to make new words.
m
_ a
_ r_ v_ e
_ _l o
_ u_ s_
Score five points for each correct word.
My score:
3 Word Factory
Worksheet A
1 went, holiday; truck, hill; crabs, seashells; set, dinner; box, under
2 clown, cloud, bowl, burst, bird, gown, girl, fowl, foul, furl, first, town, turn
4 Answers will vary. Examples: flower, shower, power, bower, cower; how,
cow, now, bow, prow, brow; growl, howl, fowl; town, down, drown, crown,
clown, gown, frown; our, hour, sour, flour
Worksheet B
1 outside, outboard, outline, outfit, outlaw; outdoors, outbreak, outskirts,
outburst, outfield
2 first, third; circus, Thursday; skirt, curly; bird, turtle; purple, burst
Spelling Challenge m
_ a
_ r_ v
_ e
_ _l o
_ u
_ _s
3 letters: all, are, arm, ear, elm, era, oar, ore, our, ram, roe, rue, sea, sue, sum, use
4 letters: aloe, also, arms, earl, ears, elms, eras, lame, lore, lose, love, lure, male,
mare, maul, meal, mole, more, move, mule, mull, muse, oars, oral, ores, ours, oval,
over, rams, rave, real, ream, roam, role, roll, rose, rove, rule, sale, same, save, seal,
seam, sear, sell, slam, slum, slur, soar, sole, some, sore, soul, sour, sure, user, vale, vase,
veal
5 letters: amuse, arose, earls, laser, loser, louse, lover, loves, lures, males, mares,
mauve, meals, molar, moles, moral, mores, mouse, mover, moves, mules, mural,
ovals, raves, realm, reams, roams, roles, rouse, roves, rules, salve, saver, serum,
slave, small, smear, smell, solar, solve, suave, vales, value, versa
1 What does the phrase need to be protected suggest about the meaning of the word, fragile?
2 Use the clues in paragraph 2 to help you write a definition for the word, erosion.
3 Use the clues in paragraph 3 to help you write a definition for the word, pollution.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.L.4.4.a Use context (e.g., definitions, examples, or restatements in text) as a clue to the meaning of a word or phrase.
State standards
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.4.1
Refer to details and examples in a text when explaining what
the text says explicitly and when drawing inferences from the
text.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.4.2
Determine the main idea of a text and explain how it is
supported by key details; summarize the text
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.4.4
Determine the meaning of general academic and domain-
specific words or phrases in a text relevant to a grade 4 topic
or subject area.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.4.4.a
Use context (e.g., definitions, examples, or restatements in
text) as a clue to the meaning of a word or phrase.
Unit 5:
Sendin
messagg
es
Great Inventors 19
mouthpiece
the receiver
the transmitter
47
In the texts
1 Which of the following can you see on pages 46 and 47?
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
4 Answer yes or no. The texts on page 46 and at the bottom of page 47:
6 Write down all the dates you can find on pages 46 and 47.
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
48
Read and learn
1 Who or what am I? Read all the texts and fill in the missing nouns.
2 With a partner, discuss the diagrams on page 47. Describe what you see.
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
3 What do you think the man holding the tin can is doing?
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
4 Complete these sentences with words from the word bank.
b A person who creates something that has never been made before is an
____________________________________.
49
5 Cross out the small letter at the beginning of each proper noun.
A ____________________________________________________________________________________
6 List some technical words from the texts. Put a comma between each one
________________________________________________________________________________________
7 Underline the exact words that Mr. Bell said to Mr. Watson.
The first sentence ever said over a telephone was Mr. Watson come here I want
to see you
A mouthpiece is the part of a telephone all the things you need for a job.
9 Why do you think Alexander Graham Bell was interested in the voice, and
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
50
A recount tells what happened,
in the order it happened. It has:
• an orientation that sets the
time and place, and introduces
the main people
Your turn • a sequence of events in
time order
1 What is something dangerous that could happen at • action verbs in the past tense
that tell what happened
your school? How could you send a warning message to • summing up.
people or ask for help?
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
2 Research an invention to do with sending messages, and write a factual
For example, One computer broke down. The subject is One computer, and the
verb is broke down. Circle the subjects in these sentences. The verbs are underlined.
2 A verb can be singular (one) or plural (more than one). A verb must go
with its subject. This is called making the subject-verb agreement. It means:
Mark a box to show if the subjects and verbs are singular or plural.
singular plural
52
4 Add s to make singular verbs in the 3rd person present tense.
b it pinches e he washes
7 Read The Internet on page 47. Add verbs to complete the sentences.
53
Unit 1: I’m goalie AGAIN!
2
3
In the texts
1 Read the texts on pages 2 and 3.
Who are the characters? Where is it set? Write a title for this narrative.
Who are the characters? Where is it set? Write a title for this narrative.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
2 a Find 10 words in the texts that have an apostrophe. Write them below.
4
b Next to each word in 2a, write:
or
L if the apostrophe shows that letters have been left out, eg isn’t.
Done
happy at all.
2 Give one reason why Ben might not tell the coach the truth.
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
3 Have you ever felt like rats have been gnawing at your guts? Circle your answer.
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
5
6 How do you think Toby would feel at the end of the game?
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
a What do you find out b What do you find out c What do you find out
a What do you find out about Toby? b What do you find out about the
other players?
6
A narrative tells a story.
It entertains, guides or teaches.
A story has a beginning, middle
and end. It has:
• a problem, or the main
character/s wants something
Your turn • one or more complications
• a resolution, where the problem
1 Choose a narrative from page 2 or 3. is resolved. It can be resolved in
a good or a bad way (a happy or
I have chosen the narrative from page ____________. sad ending).
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
3 Choose your most interesting idea and write what happens next in the story.
________________________________________________________________________________________
Who is telling the
story? Do you use
________________________________________________________________________________________
he, she, they, I, we
or us?
________________________________________________________________________________________
Use the past
________________________________________________________________________________________
tense.
________________________________________________________________________________________
Don’t forget to
include a problem,
________________________________________________________________________________________
followed by a
________________________________________________________________________________________
complication and
then a resolution.
________________________________________________________________________________________
Is your ending a
________________________________________________________________________________________
happy one or a
sad one?
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
________________________________________________________________________________________
___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
7
Common and proper nouns
A noun is a naming word. It can be a person, place, feeling or thing.
A common noun is a person, place, feeling or thing that is general, such as boy
b This wasn’t easy when it felt like rats were gnawing away at his guts.
3 Draw Ben’s coach. Use common nouns to label as many parts of him as
8
4 Did you use common or proper nouns to label Ben’s coach?
____________________________________
and 3 of this workbook. Keep going until you cannot find any more. Done
a Coach had selected Ben to be the team’s goalie for this ___________________.
b Inside his head a small ______________ teased, “Liar, liar, ______________ on fire.”
d “Don’t pick Toby,” one of the boys whispered to Ryan. “He’s hopeless at
______________________.”
7 Write at least four nouns in each column of the table.
Write common nouns in one color and proper nouns in a different color.
love
9
Unit 10: Hear the beat
98
www.earworld.net
ear World
Home Topics Contact Site Map online ear informati
ear care
hearing ï
FAQs Hearing
The ear is the sense organ that recognizes sound.
Information about sound is passed to the brain,
which ‘hears’ the sound.
99
In the texts
1 Look at pages 98–99.
a Put a cross ✗ next to the title of each text. Done
b Which text is from a website? __________________
c Put square brackets around the opening of each text. Done
d Write a keyword that summarizes the topic of each text.
dance,________________________ , ________________________ , ________________________
e Circle the text type you think all the texts are.
narrative poetry procedure information report
2 Write words from the text that describe how African drums are made.
African drums
100
3 Find and write words from the texts that fit the categories below.
a Dance, Music, Film b The ear and brain c Parts of a website
101
Read and learn
1 Use the word bank to match a word with its meaning.
Word Bank ear soundtrack volume dance
a _____________________________ I sometimes tell a story and teach young people.
b _____________________________ I help set the mood of a film.
c _____________________________ I am the amount of sound you hear.
d _____________________________ I send information about sound to the brain.
2 Use the word bank to complete the following.
Word bank rounded lobes temples
A lobe is a rounded part. An ear lobe is the soft __________________ part of the lower
outer ear. The temples are the sides of the forehead. The temporal _________________
of the brain are the rounded parts of the brain near the __________________ .
3 Copy these notes onto the correct part of the flow chart below.
amplifies sound ‘hears’ signals from the ear collects sound
102
An information report
presents information about
something. It usually describes
an entire class of things, such as
planets or plants. It has:
Your turn • a general opening statement
1 Close your eyes and listen to the sounds around you. • paragraphs describing
different features (each
Describe what you hear. ___________________________________________ begins with a topic sentence)
• a conclusion
_______________________________________________________________________________________
• text in present tense.
_______________________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________
2 Eat a soft food, like bread or a banana. Then eat a crunchy food, like
an apple or biscuit. Listen while you chew. Write the sounds on the table below.
Sound of eating soft food Sound of eating crunchy food
3 Write an information report about a musical instrument.
Title:
Write a title.
Opening:
Write the
opening
sentence about
the instrument.
Description:
104
7 Some words in front of nouns have to agree with the noun.
If the noun is singular, the word in front must be singular too.
If the noun is plural, the word in front must be plural too.
Singular Plural
a film an event some films some events
this story that goat these stories those goats
Use the word bank to complete the table below.
Word Bank a an either this that these those many some
Singular Plural
_ dancer doesn’t need words _ _ _ _ dances have been passed on
to tell a story. for many generations.
_ _ _ _ drumhead was made from the _ _ _ _ animals were killed to
skin of _ _ _ _ _ _ a goat or _ _ antelope. make _ _ _ _ _ drumheads over there.
_ _ _ _ drumhead over there was made _ _ _ _ _ drumheads here were made
from synthetic materials. from the skins of domestic animals.
8 Read the poem about love. Underline the verbs to do with the senses.
Finish the poem called Happiness in your own words.
Love Happiness
Love smells like flowers. Happiness smells like…
Hardest part
Most interesting
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
plays
e b eat
e a r th
1 0: H
Un i t JKL
Best part
Hardest part
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
great
106
websites
Cut and stic
k
pictures fro
magazines or
m Diary
newspapers
drawings
l
poetry
photos
MUST SEE
CHARACTERS!
107
This is a test to see how well you understand There are three different ways to show your
what you have read, and to see what you answer:
know about using language, spelling and • Shade the bubble next to the correct
punctuation. It is also a writing test. answer. O
• Write a word in a box. answer
Instructions
• Write a number in a box. 1
Read each question carefully. Some
questions will ask you to read a text from
another page in this book before answering.
Use a pencil. DO NOT use a pen. If you make a mistake, erase it and try again.
Start of test
Read the story on pages 90 and 91,
4 Miya’s father blamed the
and answer questions 1 to 8.
famine on
1 Which place is not a setting in this
O the rats.
legend?
O the drought.
O a cool river pool
O Miya’s marriage to the Lord of
O the bat’s cave
the Bats.
O the home of the Lord of the Pipil
5 Which event is not real?
2 The main purpose of the story is
O Rats ate the corn.
to explain
O Miya’s teeth grew into white corn.
O how a crop of white corn grew
O A good year followed a bad year.
after a famine.
O why Miya’s father blamed her for
6 What is the main reason Miya
the famine.
planted her teeth?
O why Miya had no teeth.
O Her husband told her to.
O She wanted to please her father.
3 The main character is
O She couldn’t let her people starve.
O the Lord of the Pipil.
O the Lord of the Bats.
O Miya.
108
7 The corn Miya planted became 13 The text with the most formal and
ripe technical language is
O overnight. O Telling a Story
O the next spring. O Making African Drums
O the next season. O Sound
O Ear World
8 A legend is
O an information report. 14 Which statement is not true?
O a story that teaches and explains O You can tell a story without words.
natural events. O The best African drums are made
O a story poem. by machines.
O The first films had no sound.
Read the texts on pages 98 and 99,
and answer questions 9 to 16. 15 The middle part of the ear
O collects sound.
9 All the texts are O makes sound louder.
O procedures. O changes sound into a signal that
O information reports. goes to the brain.
O recounts.
16 Which statement is not true?
10 Most of the verbs in the texts O An information report is usually
are in the not personal.
O present tense. O An information report has a title
O future tense. and paragraphs.
O past tense. O An information report tries to
make you laugh.
11 The word “I” is used in
O all the texts. The spelling mistakes in these
O some of the texts. sentences have been circled.
O none of the texts. Write the correct spelling for each
circled word in the box.
12 The text titled Ear World is from a
O textbook. 17 There was no wellcom for Miya.
O magazine.
O website.
18 Dancing is a way to sellabrait .
109
Assessment: Units 9 and 10
21 The words beauty, dreams, love, happiness and luck are all
O common nouns.
O abstract nouns.
O proper nouns.
22 The sentences Follow me! Stay with me! and Go back! are
O questions.
O commands.
O statements.
O exclamations.
23 Shade one bubble to show where the missing question mark (?) should go.
O O O
Where did you see the rat
24 Shade two bubbles to show which underlined words Shade two bubbles
should have a capital letter. OO
O O O O
110
25 Write about what really happened in Miya’s village.
Remember
• Give your recount a title.
• Tell the events in the order
they happened.
• Take a new paragraph for
each new event.
• Check your spelling and
punctuation.
• Read your recount
carefully when you finish.
• Make changes if it
doesn’t make sense.
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