50+ Grammar worksheets for 10th Grade on Quizizz | Free & Printable - Free Printable
Educational worksheet: 50+ Grammar worksheets for 10th Grade on Quizizz | Free & Printable. Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.
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Step-by-step solution for: 50+ Grammar worksheets for 10th Grade on Quizizz | Free & Printable
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: 50+ Grammar worksheets for 10th Grade on Quizizz | Free & Printable
Let’s go through each question one by one and figure out the correct answer.
---
Question 1:
*I _____ turned in my Ambassador application essay.*
Options:
A) all ready
B) already
→ “Already” means “before now” or “by this time.”
→ “All ready” means “completely prepared.”
Here, we’re talking about having turned it in before now → so already is correct.
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 2:
*Is the weather _____ for a boat ride on the lake this afternoon?*
Options:
A) alright
B) all right
→ “All right” is the grammatically correct phrase meaning “okay” or “acceptable.”
→ “Alright” is often used informally but is not considered correct in formal writing.
Since this is a grammar quiz, we go with the correct form → all right
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 3:
*I have _____ dogs than my friend, Mary, who has six dogs.*
Options:
A) less
B) fewer
→ Use “fewer” for things you can count (like dogs).
→ Use “less” for uncountable things (like water, time, sugar).
Dogs are countable → fewer
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 4:
*I _____ your apology.*
Options:
A) except
B) accept
→ “Accept” means to receive or agree to something (like an apology).
→ “Except” means “not including” or “excluding.”
You’re receiving the apology → accept
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 5:
*Lindsey will volunteer at the engineering _____ over summer.*
Options:
A) site
B) cite
C) sight
→ “Site” = a place where something is built or happens (like a construction site).
→ “Cite” = to quote or refer to something.
→ “Sight” = something you see, or the ability to see.
Engineering work happens at a “site” → site
✔ Answer: A
---
Question 6:
*Susan _____ been an A+ student, if she applied herself.*
Options:
A) could of
B) could have
→ “Could have” is correct — it’s used for hypothetical past situations.
→ “Could of” is a common mistake — it’s never correct. It comes from mishearing “could’ve” (could have).
So → could have
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 7:
*The English research papers are stacked _____ on my desk.*
Options:
A) all together
B) altogether
→ “All together” means “in a group” or “physically together.”
→ “Altogether” means “completely” or “on the whole.”
Papers stacked physically together → all together
✔ Answer: A
---
Question 8:
*Due to the _____ times the boys cheated in the game, they should have been disqualified.*
Options:
A) number of
B) amount of
→ “Number of” is used for things you can count (like times, people, books).
→ “Amount of” is for uncountable things (like water, sand, money).
“Times” here means occurrences — countable → number of
✔ Answer: A
---
Question 9:
*Abraham Lincoln is a _____ (as in former, not dead) President of the United States of America.*
(Only two options shown, but likely missing — however, based on context, we know the word is “former.” But since only A and B are visible, and no options listed, we skip unless more info.)
Wait — looking again: The question says “a _____ (as in former, not dead)” — so they want the word that means “no longer serving but alive?” Actually, Lincoln is dead — but the hint says “as in former, not dead” — that’s confusing. Maybe it’s a trick? Or maybe the blank is for “former,” which just means “previous,” regardless of life status. Since no options are fully visible, and this might be cut off, we’ll assume the intended answer is former, but since it’s not listed in A/B here, perhaps it’s incomplete. For now, we’ll note that if options were given, we’d pick the one meaning “previous.” But since we can’t see full options, we’ll leave it — but wait, maybe the original image had more? Since user didn’t provide full options, and instruction says solve what’s there, we’ll skip or assume it’s not required. Actually, looking back — the user provided up to question 9, but options aren’t fully visible. So perhaps we should only answer 1–8? But let’s check — in the image, question 9 is cut off. So we’ll stop at 8 for final answers.
Actually, re-reading: The user says “solve the problem” — and the image shows 9 questions, but question 9 is incomplete. Since we can’t answer without options, we’ll focus on 1–8.
But wait — in many such quizzes, question 9 might be testing “late” vs “former” — but “late” means deceased, and the hint says “as in former, not dead” — so they want “former.” But again, no options shown. So we’ll proceed with 1–8.
---
Final Answers for Questions 1–8:
1. B
2. B
3. B
4. B
5. A
6. B
7. A
8. A
---
Final Answer:
1. B
2. B
3. B
4. B
5. A
6. B
7. A
8. A
---
Question 1:
*I _____ turned in my Ambassador application essay.*
Options:
A) all ready
B) already
→ “Already” means “before now” or “by this time.”
→ “All ready” means “completely prepared.”
Here, we’re talking about having turned it in before now → so already is correct.
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 2:
*Is the weather _____ for a boat ride on the lake this afternoon?*
Options:
A) alright
B) all right
→ “All right” is the grammatically correct phrase meaning “okay” or “acceptable.”
→ “Alright” is often used informally but is not considered correct in formal writing.
Since this is a grammar quiz, we go with the correct form → all right
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 3:
*I have _____ dogs than my friend, Mary, who has six dogs.*
Options:
A) less
B) fewer
→ Use “fewer” for things you can count (like dogs).
→ Use “less” for uncountable things (like water, time, sugar).
Dogs are countable → fewer
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 4:
*I _____ your apology.*
Options:
A) except
B) accept
→ “Accept” means to receive or agree to something (like an apology).
→ “Except” means “not including” or “excluding.”
You’re receiving the apology → accept
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 5:
*Lindsey will volunteer at the engineering _____ over summer.*
Options:
A) site
B) cite
C) sight
→ “Site” = a place where something is built or happens (like a construction site).
→ “Cite” = to quote or refer to something.
→ “Sight” = something you see, or the ability to see.
Engineering work happens at a “site” → site
✔ Answer: A
---
Question 6:
*Susan _____ been an A+ student, if she applied herself.*
Options:
A) could of
B) could have
→ “Could have” is correct — it’s used for hypothetical past situations.
→ “Could of” is a common mistake — it’s never correct. It comes from mishearing “could’ve” (could have).
So → could have
✔ Answer: B
---
Question 7:
*The English research papers are stacked _____ on my desk.*
Options:
A) all together
B) altogether
→ “All together” means “in a group” or “physically together.”
→ “Altogether” means “completely” or “on the whole.”
Papers stacked physically together → all together
✔ Answer: A
---
Question 8:
*Due to the _____ times the boys cheated in the game, they should have been disqualified.*
Options:
A) number of
B) amount of
→ “Number of” is used for things you can count (like times, people, books).
→ “Amount of” is for uncountable things (like water, sand, money).
“Times” here means occurrences — countable → number of
✔ Answer: A
---
Question 9:
*Abraham Lincoln is a _____ (as in former, not dead) President of the United States of America.*
(Only two options shown, but likely missing — however, based on context, we know the word is “former.” But since only A and B are visible, and no options listed, we skip unless more info.)
Wait — looking again: The question says “a _____ (as in former, not dead)” — so they want the word that means “no longer serving but alive?” Actually, Lincoln is dead — but the hint says “as in former, not dead” — that’s confusing. Maybe it’s a trick? Or maybe the blank is for “former,” which just means “previous,” regardless of life status. Since no options are fully visible, and this might be cut off, we’ll assume the intended answer is former, but since it’s not listed in A/B here, perhaps it’s incomplete. For now, we’ll note that if options were given, we’d pick the one meaning “previous.” But since we can’t see full options, we’ll leave it — but wait, maybe the original image had more? Since user didn’t provide full options, and instruction says solve what’s there, we’ll skip or assume it’s not required. Actually, looking back — the user provided up to question 9, but options aren’t fully visible. So perhaps we should only answer 1–8? But let’s check — in the image, question 9 is cut off. So we’ll stop at 8 for final answers.
Actually, re-reading: The user says “solve the problem” — and the image shows 9 questions, but question 9 is incomplete. Since we can’t answer without options, we’ll focus on 1–8.
But wait — in many such quizzes, question 9 might be testing “late” vs “former” — but “late” means deceased, and the hint says “as in former, not dead” — so they want “former.” But again, no options shown. So we’ll proceed with 1–8.
---
Final Answers for Questions 1–8:
1. B
2. B
3. B
4. B
5. A
6. B
7. A
8. A
---
Final Answer:
1. B
2. B
3. B
4. B
5. A
6. B
7. A
8. A
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of 10 grade worksheet.