Adverbs Worksheet for students to complete sentences using appropriate adverbs.
Adverbs Worksheet with fill-in-the-blank sentences and a word bank for students to practice using adverbs correctly.
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Adverbs online activity for Grade 3
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Adverbs online activity for Grade 3
Final Answer:
1. well
2. quickly
3. nicely
4. now
5. beautifully
6. early
7. outside
8. early
9. soon *(Note: “soon” is not in the word bank, but the only suitable word from the list is “early”—however, “early” fits better in #8. Rechecking: for #9, “now” is already used in #4, and the remaining unused words are: Outside, Well, Totally, Here, Early, Quite, Nicely, Quickly, Now, Beautifully — all 10 are listed. Since #9 needs an adverb of time and “now” is already used in #4, but the worksheet allows reuse? Typically in such exercises, words can be reused unless stated otherwise. However, looking carefully: sentence 9 “The movie is starting ________.” — the best fit from the list is now (even if used before), or possibly early, but “starting early” is odd. Actually, “now” is most natural. Let’s assign based on best fit per sentence, allowing reuse if needed—but the instruction doesn’t forbid reuse. Still, standard practice in such worksheets is one word per blank, and 10 blanks with 10 words suggests one-to-one. So let’s match uniquely:
Given words:
Outside, Well, Totally, Here, Early, Quite, Nicely, Quickly, Now, Beautifully
Sentences:
1. He swims ________. → *well* (adverb of manner)
2. He ran ________. → *quickly*
3. She spoke ________. → *nicely*
4. He ________ gets me. → *now* (time) — or “totally”? “He totally gets me” is common slang. Yes! “Totally” fits better here as an intensifier (adverb modifying “gets”). So #4 = totally
5. She plays the piano ________. → *beautifully*
6. She will plant her garden ________. → *early* (time)
7. The children love to play ________. → *outside* (place)
8. She arrived ________ for the meeting. → *early* — conflict! But #6 used early. Wait—maybe #8 = *quite*? No, “quite for the meeting” is wrong. “Early” is correct for #8; then #6 could be *here*? “plant her garden here” — possible, but less natural. Let’s re-evaluate all:
Best unique matching:
1. well
2. quickly
3. nicely
4. totally (“He totally gets me” is idiomatic)
5. beautifully
6. early
7. outside
8. now (“arrived now” is odd — you don’t say “arrived now”, you say “is arriving now”. Hmm.)
Alternative: #8 = *early* (standard: “arrived early”)
Then #6: “She will plant her garden here” — acceptable if garden location is emphasized.
#9: “The movie is starting now.” → perfect.
#10: “This spaghetti is quite delicious.” → *quite* (intensifier for adjective)
Remaining word: *here* — unused. But sentence 5 could be *here*? No, “plays the piano here” is possible but less likely than beautifully.
Actually, standard answer keys for this exact worksheet (common online) are:
1. well
2. quickly
3. nicely
4. now
5. beautifully
6. early
7. outside
8. early — duplicate? No, that can’t be.
Wait — there are 10 blanks and 10 words. Let’s assign unambiguously:
- “He swims ___” → well
- “He ran ___” → quickly
- “She spoke ___” → nicely
- “He ___ gets me” → totally (only adverb that intensifies “gets me” naturally)
- “She plays the piano ___” → beautifully
- “She will plant her garden ___” → here (makes sense: in this place)
- “The children love to play ___” → outside
- “She arrived ___ for the meeting” → early
- “The movie is starting ___” → now
- “This spaghetti is ___ delicious” → quite
That uses all 10: well, quickly, nicely, totally, beautifully, here, outside, early, now, quite.
Yes — that’s correct.
Final Answer:
1. well
2. quickly
3. nicely
4. totally
5. beautifully
6. here
7. outside
8. early
9. now
10. quite
1. well
2. quickly
3. nicely
4. now
5. beautifully
6. early
7. outside
8. early
9. soon *(Note: “soon” is not in the word bank, but the only suitable word from the list is “early”—however, “early” fits better in #8. Rechecking: for #9, “now” is already used in #4, and the remaining unused words are: Outside, Well, Totally, Here, Early, Quite, Nicely, Quickly, Now, Beautifully — all 10 are listed. Since #9 needs an adverb of time and “now” is already used in #4, but the worksheet allows reuse? Typically in such exercises, words can be reused unless stated otherwise. However, looking carefully: sentence 9 “The movie is starting ________.” — the best fit from the list is now (even if used before), or possibly early, but “starting early” is odd. Actually, “now” is most natural. Let’s assign based on best fit per sentence, allowing reuse if needed—but the instruction doesn’t forbid reuse. Still, standard practice in such worksheets is one word per blank, and 10 blanks with 10 words suggests one-to-one. So let’s match uniquely:
Given words:
Outside, Well, Totally, Here, Early, Quite, Nicely, Quickly, Now, Beautifully
Sentences:
1. He swims ________. → *well* (adverb of manner)
2. He ran ________. → *quickly*
3. She spoke ________. → *nicely*
4. He ________ gets me. → *now* (time) — or “totally”? “He totally gets me” is common slang. Yes! “Totally” fits better here as an intensifier (adverb modifying “gets”). So #4 = totally
5. She plays the piano ________. → *beautifully*
6. She will plant her garden ________. → *early* (time)
7. The children love to play ________. → *outside* (place)
8. She arrived ________ for the meeting. → *early* — conflict! But #6 used early. Wait—maybe #8 = *quite*? No, “quite for the meeting” is wrong. “Early” is correct for #8; then #6 could be *here*? “plant her garden here” — possible, but less natural. Let’s re-evaluate all:
Best unique matching:
1. well
2. quickly
3. nicely
4. totally (“He totally gets me” is idiomatic)
5. beautifully
6. early
7. outside
8. now (“arrived now” is odd — you don’t say “arrived now”, you say “is arriving now”. Hmm.)
Alternative: #8 = *early* (standard: “arrived early”)
Then #6: “She will plant her garden here” — acceptable if garden location is emphasized.
#9: “The movie is starting now.” → perfect.
#10: “This spaghetti is quite delicious.” → *quite* (intensifier for adjective)
Remaining word: *here* — unused. But sentence 5 could be *here*? No, “plays the piano here” is possible but less likely than beautifully.
Actually, standard answer keys for this exact worksheet (common online) are:
1. well
2. quickly
3. nicely
4. now
5. beautifully
6. early
7. outside
8. early — duplicate? No, that can’t be.
Wait — there are 10 blanks and 10 words. Let’s assign unambiguously:
- “He swims ___” → well
- “He ran ___” → quickly
- “She spoke ___” → nicely
- “He ___ gets me” → totally (only adverb that intensifies “gets me” naturally)
- “She plays the piano ___” → beautifully
- “She will plant her garden ___” → here (makes sense: in this place)
- “The children love to play ___” → outside
- “She arrived ___ for the meeting” → early
- “The movie is starting ___” → now
- “This spaghetti is ___ delicious” → quite
That uses all 10: well, quickly, nicely, totally, beautifully, here, outside, early, now, quite.
Yes — that’s correct.
Final Answer:
1. well
2. quickly
3. nicely
4. totally
5. beautifully
6. here
7. outside
8. early
9. now
10. quite
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of adverb worksheet.