Articles Worksheet for Class 3
Name: ____________________
Date: ____________________
Part 1: Fill in the Blanks with “a,” “an,” or “the”
- I saw ___ elephant at the zoo.
- He is ___ honest man.
- She has ___ apple in her lunchbox.
- ___ sun is shining brightly today.
- I want to buy ___ new bicycle.
- My mother is ___ excellent cook.
- We have ___ school holiday tomorrow.
- ___ book on the table is mine.
- I have ___ idea!
- He is ___ best player in the team.
Part 2: Choose the Correct Article
- I have (a / an) orange in my bag.
- (A / The) cat is sitting on the mat.
- We went to (a / the) park yesterday.
- She is (a / an) engineer.
- (An / The) moon is very bright tonight.
- He bought (a / an) umbrella for the rain.
- I saw (a / an) interesting movie yesterday.
- (An / The) dog in the yard is barking loudly.
Part 3: Correct the Sentences
Read the sentences and correct the use of articles.
- She is a best dancer in the class.
Correction: _____________________________ - I want to eat a apple.
Correction: _____________________________ - The tiger is a dangerous animal.
Correction: _____________________________ - We saw a beautiful painting in the museum.
Correction: _____________________________
Part 4: Make Sentences
Make sentences using the following words and articles “a,” “an,” or “the”:
- cat: _____________________________________________
- orange: __________________________________________
- dog: _____________________________________________
- book: ____________________________________________
- apple: ___________________________________________
Part 5: Fill in the Correct Article (a, an, the)
- I need ___ umbrella.
- Can you see ___ moon in the sky?
- This is ___ only book I have.
- ___ teacher is very kind.
- We have ___ picnic tomorrow.
- She has ___ idea for the project.
Part 6: True or False
- We use “an” before words starting with a consonant sound. (True/False)
- We use “the” when talking about something specific. (True/False)
- “A” is used before words starting with vowels. (True/False)
- “The” is used before singular and plural nouns when we know the specific one. (True/False)