Educational worksheet for spelling, word matching, and comparison exercises.
A worksheet with three exercises: circling the correct spelling, matching words, and choosing proper words of comparison, featuring the Edufever logo.
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Step-by-step solution for: CBSE Class 2 English Practice Worksheet in PDF
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: CBSE Class 2 English Practice Worksheet in PDF
Let’s go through each question one by one and solve them carefully.
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Question 1: Circle the right spelling
We need to pick the correctly spelled word from each row.
- First row: “stairgt”, “straight”, “strite” → The correct spelling is straight
- Second row: “shining”, “shynig”, “shiing” → Correct is shining
- Third row: “litle”, “lyttle”, “little” → Correct is little
- Fourth row: “puzzle”, “pussle”, “puszil” → Correct is puzzle
- Fifth row: “ceras”, “erise”, “erase” → Correct is erase
✔ So, we circle: straight, shining, little, puzzle, erase
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Question 2: Match the following
We match colors with things that are commonly associated with those colors.
- green → ? (chimney? marigold? steps? door?)
Green is often linked with nature or plants — but none of these are green. Wait — maybe it’s about common phrases or objects? Let’s think differently.
Actually, this might be matching based on common associations in stories or idioms:
But looking at the options:
green — chimney? No.
red — chimney? Sometimes chimneys are red brick.
white — steps? Maybe white marble steps?
yellow — marigold? Yes! Marigolds are yellow flowers.
green — ? Maybe not matching directly.
Wait — perhaps it’s a trick? Or maybe it’s about what color something *is* typically?
Let’s try:
- green → ? (none really fit)
Hold on — maybe it’s about “Green Door”, “Red Steps”, etc.? Not standard.
Alternatively, maybe it’s misprinted? But let’s look again.
Actually, I recall a classic riddle or poem:
> Green as grass,
> Red as blood,
> White as snow,
> Yellow as gold...
But here the matches are:
green — ?
red — ?
white — ?
yellow — ?
And the options are: chimney, marigold, steps, door.
Perhaps:
- yellow → marigold (flowers are yellow) ✔
- white → steps (maybe white stone steps?) ✔
- red → chimney (brick chimneys are often red) ✔
- green → door (some doors are painted green) ✔
That seems plausible for a child’s worksheet.
So:
green — door
red — chimney
white — steps
yellow — marigold
✔ That makes sense.
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Question 3: Choose and fill with proper words of comparison
These are similes — comparing using “as ___ as ___”
a) As busy as ______ [bee, see]
→ Bees are known to be very busy. “See” doesn’t make sense.
✔ Answer: bee
b) As slow as ______ [horse, snail]
→ Snails are famously slow. Horses are fast.
✔ Answer: snail
c) As black as ______ [snow, cloud]
→ Snow is white. Clouds can be gray or white, but sometimes dark clouds are called “black”. However, the common phrase is “as black as coal” — but between snow and cloud, cloud is closer. Actually, wait — there’s a saying “as black as night”, but not listed. Between the two, “cloud” can be black during storms. But actually, the most common simile taught to kids is “as black as coal” — but since that’s not an option, and snow is definitely not black, we choose cloud.
Wait — let me double-check: Is there a standard simile like “as black as a cloud”? Not really. But “as black as ink” or “coal”. Since snow is white, and cloud can be dark, we pick cloud.
Actually, upon second thought — maybe it’s a trick? But no, in many school worksheets, they use “as black as a cloud” for storm clouds. So we’ll go with that.
✔ Answer: cloud
---
Now, compiling all answers clearly.
Final Answer:
1. Circled words: straight, shining, little, puzzle, erase
2. Matches:
- green — door
- red — chimney
- white — steps
- yellow — marigold
3. Fill in:
a) bee
b) snail
c) cloud
---
Question 1: Circle the right spelling
We need to pick the correctly spelled word from each row.
- First row: “stairgt”, “straight”, “strite” → The correct spelling is straight
- Second row: “shining”, “shynig”, “shiing” → Correct is shining
- Third row: “litle”, “lyttle”, “little” → Correct is little
- Fourth row: “puzzle”, “pussle”, “puszil” → Correct is puzzle
- Fifth row: “ceras”, “erise”, “erase” → Correct is erase
✔ So, we circle: straight, shining, little, puzzle, erase
---
Question 2: Match the following
We match colors with things that are commonly associated with those colors.
- green → ? (chimney? marigold? steps? door?)
Green is often linked with nature or plants — but none of these are green. Wait — maybe it’s about common phrases or objects? Let’s think differently.
Actually, this might be matching based on common associations in stories or idioms:
But looking at the options:
green — chimney? No.
red — chimney? Sometimes chimneys are red brick.
white — steps? Maybe white marble steps?
yellow — marigold? Yes! Marigolds are yellow flowers.
green — ? Maybe not matching directly.
Wait — perhaps it’s a trick? Or maybe it’s about what color something *is* typically?
Let’s try:
- green → ? (none really fit)
Hold on — maybe it’s about “Green Door”, “Red Steps”, etc.? Not standard.
Alternatively, maybe it’s misprinted? But let’s look again.
Actually, I recall a classic riddle or poem:
> Green as grass,
> Red as blood,
> White as snow,
> Yellow as gold...
But here the matches are:
green — ?
red — ?
white — ?
yellow — ?
And the options are: chimney, marigold, steps, door.
Perhaps:
- yellow → marigold (flowers are yellow) ✔
- white → steps (maybe white stone steps?) ✔
- red → chimney (brick chimneys are often red) ✔
- green → door (some doors are painted green) ✔
That seems plausible for a child’s worksheet.
So:
green — door
red — chimney
white — steps
yellow — marigold
✔ That makes sense.
---
Question 3: Choose and fill with proper words of comparison
These are similes — comparing using “as ___ as ___”
a) As busy as ______ [bee, see]
→ Bees are known to be very busy. “See” doesn’t make sense.
✔ Answer: bee
b) As slow as ______ [horse, snail]
→ Snails are famously slow. Horses are fast.
✔ Answer: snail
c) As black as ______ [snow, cloud]
→ Snow is white. Clouds can be gray or white, but sometimes dark clouds are called “black”. However, the common phrase is “as black as coal” — but between snow and cloud, cloud is closer. Actually, wait — there’s a saying “as black as night”, but not listed. Between the two, “cloud” can be black during storms. But actually, the most common simile taught to kids is “as black as coal” — but since that’s not an option, and snow is definitely not black, we choose cloud.
Wait — let me double-check: Is there a standard simile like “as black as a cloud”? Not really. But “as black as ink” or “coal”. Since snow is white, and cloud can be dark, we pick cloud.
Actually, upon second thought — maybe it’s a trick? But no, in many school worksheets, they use “as black as a cloud” for storm clouds. So we’ll go with that.
✔ Answer: cloud
---
Now, compiling all answers clearly.
Final Answer:
1. Circled words: straight, shining, little, puzzle, erase
2. Matches:
- green — door
- red — chimney
- white — steps
- yellow — marigold
3. Fill in:
a) bee
b) snail
c) cloud
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of english practice worksheet.