Grade 7 worksheet - Free Printable
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Step-by-step solution for: Grade 7 worksheet
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Grade 7 worksheet
Let's go through each question one by one and solve them with explanations.
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39. After you take some medicines, you will feel ...............
A. well
B. better
C. worse
D. A&B
✔ Answer: B. better
Explanation:
The sentence implies a positive outcome after taking medicine. "Better" is the comparative form used to express improvement in health. While "well" is correct in meaning (feeling healthy), it's not typically used in comparisons unless comparing states. However, since the context is about feeling improved, "better" is the most appropriate choice. "Worse" contradicts the expected effect of medicine. So, B is best.
> Note: D includes both A and B — but "well" alone doesn't fit as naturally here; "better" is more accurate.
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40. She left without ................. goodbye.
A. say
B. to say
C. saying
D. A&B
✔ Answer: C. saying
Explanation:
After "without", we need a gerund (verb + -ing).
So, "without saying goodbye" is correct.
"Without to say" is grammatically incorrect.
"Say" alone cannot follow "without".
✔ Correct: saying
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41. They only eat ................. and delicious food.
A. healthy
B. healthful
C. healthily
D. health
✔ Answer: A. healthy
Explanation:
We are looking for an adjective to describe "food".
- "Healthy" = commonly used to describe food that is good for you. ✔
- "Healthful" = also correct, but less common and more formal. It means promoting health.
- "Healthily" is an adverb → can't modify "food". ✘
- "Health" is a noun → doesn't work here. ✘
While both A and B could be argued, "healthy" is far more common and natural in everyday English.
✔ Best answer: A. healthy
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42. It is an ................. book.
A. interest
B. interested
C. interesting
D. interestingly
✔ Answer: C. interesting
Explanation:
We need an adjective to describe the book.
- "Interesting" = something that interests others (book is interesting) ✔
- "Interested" = refers to a person who feels interest (e.g., I am interested) ✘
- "Interest" = noun → not suitable here ✘
- "Interestingly" = adverb → modifies verbs, not nouns ✘
✔ So, C. interesting is correct.
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43. How ................. does the T.V cost?
A. far
B. long
C. often
D. much
✔ Answer: D. much
Explanation:
To ask about price, use "how much".
- "How much does it cost?" → correct ✔
- "How far" = distance
- "How long" = duration
- "How often" = frequency
✔ So, D. much
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44. I'm not a teacher and ................. is he.
A. so
B. neither
C. either
D. too
✔ Answer: B. neither
Explanation:
This is a negative statement: "I'm not a teacher." Then we want to say "He is not either."
Use "neither" to continue a negative statement:
- "I'm not a teacher, and neither is he." ✔
- "either" is used at the end of a sentence: "He isn't a teacher either."
- "so" is for positive statements: "I am a teacher, so is he."
- "too" = also, but placed at the end.
✔ So, B. neither
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45. Nam is a ................. student. He always gets good marks
A. good
B. well
C. bad
D. badly
✔ Answer: A. good
Explanation:
We need an adjective to describe the noun "student".
- "Good" = adjective → correct ✔
- "Well" = adverb (used for how someone is feeling or doing actions) → not for describing people as nouns ✘
- "Bad" and "badly" don’t match the context (he gets good marks)
✔ So, A. good
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46. You can't eat these bananas because they aren't .................
A. green
B. ripe
C. fresh
D. blue
✔ Answer: B. ripe
Explanation:
Bananas must be ripe to eat. Green bananas are unripe, and while they might be edible, they're not sweet or ready. "Ripe" is the best reason why you wouldn't eat them.
- "Fresh" – possible, but not specific enough
- "Blue" – bananas don't turn blue; irrelevant
- "Green" – actually, green bananas are unripe, but the sentence says “they aren’t green” → would mean they’re ripe → contradiction
But if they're not ripe, then you shouldn’t eat them.
✔ So, B. ripe
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47. I prefer watching soccer at the stadium to ................. them on TV
A. watching
B. watch
C. watches
D. watches
✔ Answer: A. watching
Explanation:
"Prefer X to Y" → both X and Y should be in the same form.
Here: "prefer watching ... to watching ..."
So, after "to", we need a gerund (watching).
✔ So, A. watching
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48. You ought ................. your room.
A. clean
B. to clean
C. cleaning
D. cleaned
✔ Answer: B. to clean
Explanation:
"Ought" is a modal verb (like "should") and is followed by to + verb.
- "You ought to clean your room." ✔
- "Ought to do" is standard usage.
✔ So, B. to clean
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49. Nga: My mother isn't fat. What about your mother? - Mai: She isn't fat, .................
A. too
B. to
C. either
D. neither
✔ Answer: C. either
Explanation:
This is a negative sentence ("She isn't fat"), so we need a negative word to add emphasis.
- "Either" is used at the end of a negative sentence: "She isn't fat, either." ✔
- "Too" is for positive: "She is fat, too."
- "Neither" would require inversion: "Neither is she." (but not used here)
- "To" is wrong grammar
✔ So, C. either
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50. Long: I didn't go to our English football club last week. - Nam: .................
A. So do I
B. So did I
C. Too did I
D. Neither did I
✔ Answer: D. Neither did I
Explanation:
Long said he didn't go → negative statement.
Nam agrees: "I didn't go either."
Use "Neither did I" to agree with a negative past tense.
- "So did I" = I did go → contradicts
- "So do I" = present tense → wrong tense
- "Too did I" → not grammatical
✔ So, D. Neither did I
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51. The waiter: ................. would you like, beer or wine? - Mr Brown: Beer, please.
✔ Answer: What
Explanation:
The waiter is offering two options: beer or wine.
So the question should be: "What would you like, beer or wine?"
Other possibilities like "Which" could work, but "what" is more natural when offering choices.
However, the blank seems to expect a word starting with a capital letter, and likely just one word.
But in this case, the correct word is "What".
✔ So, What
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| Q | Answer |
|---|--------|
| 39 | B. better |
| 40 | C. saying |
| 41 | A. healthy |
| 42 | C. interesting |
| 43 | D. much |
| 44 | B. neither |
| 45 | A. good |
| 46 | B. ripe |
| 47 | A. watching |
| 48 | B. to clean |
| 49 | C. either |
| 50 | D. Neither did I |
| 51 | What |
Let me know if you'd like these explained further!
---
39. After you take some medicines, you will feel ...............
A. well
B. better
C. worse
D. A&B
✔ Answer: B. better
Explanation:
The sentence implies a positive outcome after taking medicine. "Better" is the comparative form used to express improvement in health. While "well" is correct in meaning (feeling healthy), it's not typically used in comparisons unless comparing states. However, since the context is about feeling improved, "better" is the most appropriate choice. "Worse" contradicts the expected effect of medicine. So, B is best.
> Note: D includes both A and B — but "well" alone doesn't fit as naturally here; "better" is more accurate.
---
40. She left without ................. goodbye.
A. say
B. to say
C. saying
D. A&B
✔ Answer: C. saying
Explanation:
After "without", we need a gerund (verb + -ing).
So, "without saying goodbye" is correct.
"Without to say" is grammatically incorrect.
"Say" alone cannot follow "without".
✔ Correct: saying
---
41. They only eat ................. and delicious food.
A. healthy
B. healthful
C. healthily
D. health
✔ Answer: A. healthy
Explanation:
We are looking for an adjective to describe "food".
- "Healthy" = commonly used to describe food that is good for you. ✔
- "Healthful" = also correct, but less common and more formal. It means promoting health.
- "Healthily" is an adverb → can't modify "food". ✘
- "Health" is a noun → doesn't work here. ✘
While both A and B could be argued, "healthy" is far more common and natural in everyday English.
✔ Best answer: A. healthy
---
42. It is an ................. book.
A. interest
B. interested
C. interesting
D. interestingly
✔ Answer: C. interesting
Explanation:
We need an adjective to describe the book.
- "Interesting" = something that interests others (book is interesting) ✔
- "Interested" = refers to a person who feels interest (e.g., I am interested) ✘
- "Interest" = noun → not suitable here ✘
- "Interestingly" = adverb → modifies verbs, not nouns ✘
✔ So, C. interesting is correct.
---
43. How ................. does the T.V cost?
A. far
B. long
C. often
D. much
✔ Answer: D. much
Explanation:
To ask about price, use "how much".
- "How much does it cost?" → correct ✔
- "How far" = distance
- "How long" = duration
- "How often" = frequency
✔ So, D. much
---
44. I'm not a teacher and ................. is he.
A. so
B. neither
C. either
D. too
✔ Answer: B. neither
Explanation:
This is a negative statement: "I'm not a teacher." Then we want to say "He is not either."
Use "neither" to continue a negative statement:
- "I'm not a teacher, and neither is he." ✔
- "either" is used at the end of a sentence: "He isn't a teacher either."
- "so" is for positive statements: "I am a teacher, so is he."
- "too" = also, but placed at the end.
✔ So, B. neither
---
45. Nam is a ................. student. He always gets good marks
A. good
B. well
C. bad
D. badly
✔ Answer: A. good
Explanation:
We need an adjective to describe the noun "student".
- "Good" = adjective → correct ✔
- "Well" = adverb (used for how someone is feeling or doing actions) → not for describing people as nouns ✘
- "Bad" and "badly" don’t match the context (he gets good marks)
✔ So, A. good
---
46. You can't eat these bananas because they aren't .................
A. green
B. ripe
C. fresh
D. blue
✔ Answer: B. ripe
Explanation:
Bananas must be ripe to eat. Green bananas are unripe, and while they might be edible, they're not sweet or ready. "Ripe" is the best reason why you wouldn't eat them.
- "Fresh" – possible, but not specific enough
- "Blue" – bananas don't turn blue; irrelevant
- "Green" – actually, green bananas are unripe, but the sentence says “they aren’t green” → would mean they’re ripe → contradiction
But if they're not ripe, then you shouldn’t eat them.
✔ So, B. ripe
---
47. I prefer watching soccer at the stadium to ................. them on TV
A. watching
B. watch
C. watches
D. watches
✔ Answer: A. watching
Explanation:
"Prefer X to Y" → both X and Y should be in the same form.
Here: "prefer watching ... to watching ..."
So, after "to", we need a gerund (watching).
✔ So, A. watching
---
48. You ought ................. your room.
A. clean
B. to clean
C. cleaning
D. cleaned
✔ Answer: B. to clean
Explanation:
"Ought" is a modal verb (like "should") and is followed by to + verb.
- "You ought to clean your room." ✔
- "Ought to do" is standard usage.
✔ So, B. to clean
---
49. Nga: My mother isn't fat. What about your mother? - Mai: She isn't fat, .................
A. too
B. to
C. either
D. neither
✔ Answer: C. either
Explanation:
This is a negative sentence ("She isn't fat"), so we need a negative word to add emphasis.
- "Either" is used at the end of a negative sentence: "She isn't fat, either." ✔
- "Too" is for positive: "She is fat, too."
- "Neither" would require inversion: "Neither is she." (but not used here)
- "To" is wrong grammar
✔ So, C. either
---
50. Long: I didn't go to our English football club last week. - Nam: .................
A. So do I
B. So did I
C. Too did I
D. Neither did I
✔ Answer: D. Neither did I
Explanation:
Long said he didn't go → negative statement.
Nam agrees: "I didn't go either."
Use "Neither did I" to agree with a negative past tense.
- "So did I" = I did go → contradicts
- "So do I" = present tense → wrong tense
- "Too did I" → not grammatical
✔ So, D. Neither did I
---
51. The waiter: ................. would you like, beer or wine? - Mr Brown: Beer, please.
✔ Answer: What
Explanation:
The waiter is offering two options: beer or wine.
So the question should be: "What would you like, beer or wine?"
Other possibilities like "Which" could work, but "what" is more natural when offering choices.
However, the blank seems to expect a word starting with a capital letter, and likely just one word.
But in this case, the correct word is "What".
✔ So, What
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✔ Final Answers:
| Q | Answer |
|---|--------|
| 39 | B. better |
| 40 | C. saying |
| 41 | A. healthy |
| 42 | C. interesting |
| 43 | D. much |
| 44 | B. neither |
| 45 | A. good |
| 46 | B. ripe |
| 47 | A. watching |
| 48 | B. to clean |
| 49 | C. either |
| 50 | D. Neither did I |
| 51 | What |
Let me know if you'd like these explained further!
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of 7th grade language worksheet.