Arrange the words to form correct sentences in this English grammar worksheet.
English grammar worksheet with sentences to arrange in correct order, from schoolguide.in
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Jumbled Sentences Worksheets
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Jumbled Sentences Worksheets
Here are the sentences arranged in the correct order to make complete sense:
1. These are my toys.
2. The cow gives us milk. *(Note: The original words were "milk cow us gives." To make a proper sentence, we usually add "The" and change "gives" to fit, but strictly using only the provided words: Cow gives us milk. is the most direct arrangement, though grammatically it often needs an article. Let's stick to the exact words given as much as possible while making sense. A very common structure for this level is subject-verb-object. "Cow gives us milk" works.)*
*Correction*: Looking at standard grammar exercises, sometimes articles are implied or missing in the scramble. Let's look closer. "milk cow us gives". Subject: Cow. Verb: gives. Object: us milk? Or "gives milk to us"? No "to". So, Cow gives us milk.
3. Mary had a little lamb.
4. You should always respect your elders.
5. Where are you going?
6. There are seven days in a week. *(Note: The words provided are "seven weeks are a in there days." This looks like a typo in the worksheet itself. It likely meant "seven days in a week". Let's rearrange the given words: "There are seven days in a week" uses 'days' and 'week'. The prompt has "weeks" and "days". Let's try: There are seven days in a week. Wait, the word list is: `seven`, `weeks`, `are`, `a`, `in`, `there`, `days`. This is tricky. It could be There are seven days in a week if 'weeks' was a typo for 'week'. Or perhaps There are seven weeks in a... no. Let's assume the standard fact: There are seven days in a week. If I must use ALL words exactly: "There are seven days in a weeks" is wrong. "There are seven weeks in a days" is wrong. It is highly probable the word 'weeks' is a typo for 'week' or 'days' is extra. However, looking at similar worksheets online, the standard sentence is There are seven days in a week. Let's provide the most logical sentence even if one word seems off, or assume 'weeks' was meant to be 'week'. Actually, let's look at the words again: `seven`, `weeks`, `are`, `a`, `in`, `there`, `days`. Maybe: There are seven days in a week. (Assuming 'weeks' is a typo for 'week'). Another possibility: There are seven weeks in a... no. Let's go with the most common sense answer for a student: There are seven days in a week.)*
*Self-Correction*: Let's look really closely at item 6. `seven weeks are a in there days.` This is almost certainly a poorly constructed question where "weeks" should be "week" and "days" is the unit. Or "days" should be "week". Let's provide the standard factual sentence: There are seven days in a week.
7. Children love to play games.
8. A donkey is a beast of burden. *(Words: `beast`, `donkey`, `a`, `burden`, `of`, `is`. Missing one 'a'? The list has `beast`, `donkey`, `a`, `burden`, `of`, `is`. That's 6 words. "Donkey is a beast of burden" uses 6 words. Perfect.)* -> Donkey is a beast of burden.
9. Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall. *(Words: `sat`, `wall`, `on`, `Humpty`, `Dumpty`. Missing 'a'? The list is `sat`, `wall`, `on`, `Humpty`, `Dumpty`. That's 5 words. "Humpty Dumpty sat on wall" is grammatically weak but uses all words. Usually, it's "sat on a wall". Let's check if 'a' is hidden. No. So: Humpty Dumpty sat on wall.)*
*Wait*, looking at #9 again: `sat wall on Humpty Dumpty.` There is no 'a'. So the strict arrangement is: Humpty Dumpty sat on wall.
10. Do not make a noise. *(Words: `make`, `noise`, `a`, `not`, `do`. Arrangement: Do not make a noise.)*
Let's refine the answers to be perfectly clear for a student.
1. These are my toys.
2. Cow gives us milk. (Or "The cow gives us milk" if adding words is allowed, but usually these puzzles use exact words. "Cow gives us milk" is acceptable in simple grammar contexts).
3. Mary had a little lamb.
4. You should always respect your elders.
5. Where are you going?
6. There are seven days in a week. (Note: The worksheet likely has a typo with "weeks" instead of "week", but this is the only sentence that makes sense).
7. Children love to play games.
8. Donkey is a beast of burden.
9. Humpty Dumpty sat on wall. (Note: Typically "on a wall", but "a" is not in the list).
10. Do not make a noise.
Final Answer:
1. These are my toys.
2. Cow gives us milk.
3. Mary had a little lamb.
4. You should always respect your elders.
5. Where are you going?
6. There are seven days in a week.
7. Children love to play games.
8. Donkey is a beast of burden.
9. Humpty Dumpty sat on wall.
10. Do not make a noise.
1. These are my toys.
2. The cow gives us milk. *(Note: The original words were "milk cow us gives." To make a proper sentence, we usually add "The" and change "gives" to fit, but strictly using only the provided words: Cow gives us milk. is the most direct arrangement, though grammatically it often needs an article. Let's stick to the exact words given as much as possible while making sense. A very common structure for this level is subject-verb-object. "Cow gives us milk" works.)*
*Correction*: Looking at standard grammar exercises, sometimes articles are implied or missing in the scramble. Let's look closer. "milk cow us gives". Subject: Cow. Verb: gives. Object: us milk? Or "gives milk to us"? No "to". So, Cow gives us milk.
3. Mary had a little lamb.
4. You should always respect your elders.
5. Where are you going?
6. There are seven days in a week. *(Note: The words provided are "seven weeks are a in there days." This looks like a typo in the worksheet itself. It likely meant "seven days in a week". Let's rearrange the given words: "There are seven days in a week" uses 'days' and 'week'. The prompt has "weeks" and "days". Let's try: There are seven days in a week. Wait, the word list is: `seven`, `weeks`, `are`, `a`, `in`, `there`, `days`. This is tricky. It could be There are seven days in a week if 'weeks' was a typo for 'week'. Or perhaps There are seven weeks in a... no. Let's assume the standard fact: There are seven days in a week. If I must use ALL words exactly: "There are seven days in a weeks" is wrong. "There are seven weeks in a days" is wrong. It is highly probable the word 'weeks' is a typo for 'week' or 'days' is extra. However, looking at similar worksheets online, the standard sentence is There are seven days in a week. Let's provide the most logical sentence even if one word seems off, or assume 'weeks' was meant to be 'week'. Actually, let's look at the words again: `seven`, `weeks`, `are`, `a`, `in`, `there`, `days`. Maybe: There are seven days in a week. (Assuming 'weeks' is a typo for 'week'). Another possibility: There are seven weeks in a... no. Let's go with the most common sense answer for a student: There are seven days in a week.)*
*Self-Correction*: Let's look really closely at item 6. `seven weeks are a in there days.` This is almost certainly a poorly constructed question where "weeks" should be "week" and "days" is the unit. Or "days" should be "week". Let's provide the standard factual sentence: There are seven days in a week.
7. Children love to play games.
8. A donkey is a beast of burden. *(Words: `beast`, `donkey`, `a`, `burden`, `of`, `is`. Missing one 'a'? The list has `beast`, `donkey`, `a`, `burden`, `of`, `is`. That's 6 words. "Donkey is a beast of burden" uses 6 words. Perfect.)* -> Donkey is a beast of burden.
9. Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall. *(Words: `sat`, `wall`, `on`, `Humpty`, `Dumpty`. Missing 'a'? The list is `sat`, `wall`, `on`, `Humpty`, `Dumpty`. That's 5 words. "Humpty Dumpty sat on wall" is grammatically weak but uses all words. Usually, it's "sat on a wall". Let's check if 'a' is hidden. No. So: Humpty Dumpty sat on wall.)*
*Wait*, looking at #9 again: `sat wall on Humpty Dumpty.` There is no 'a'. So the strict arrangement is: Humpty Dumpty sat on wall.
10. Do not make a noise. *(Words: `make`, `noise`, `a`, `not`, `do`. Arrangement: Do not make a noise.)*
Let's refine the answers to be perfectly clear for a student.
1. These are my toys.
2. Cow gives us milk. (Or "The cow gives us milk" if adding words is allowed, but usually these puzzles use exact words. "Cow gives us milk" is acceptable in simple grammar contexts).
3. Mary had a little lamb.
4. You should always respect your elders.
5. Where are you going?
6. There are seven days in a week. (Note: The worksheet likely has a typo with "weeks" instead of "week", but this is the only sentence that makes sense).
7. Children love to play games.
8. Donkey is a beast of burden.
9. Humpty Dumpty sat on wall. (Note: Typically "on a wall", but "a" is not in the list).
10. Do not make a noise.
Final Answer:
1. These are my toys.
2. Cow gives us milk.
3. Mary had a little lamb.
4. You should always respect your elders.
5. Where are you going?
6. There are seven days in a week.
7. Children love to play games.
8. Donkey is a beast of burden.
9. Humpty Dumpty sat on wall.
10. Do not make a noise.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of sentences worksheet.