Class 3 English Worksheet on Capital Letters and Titles

Class 3 English Worksheet on Capital Letters and Titles
Class 3 English Worksheet on Capital Letters and Titles

Class 3 English Worksheet on Capital Letters and Titles

Class 3EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Sejal Jain
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An English educator with 10+ years of experience, I hold a Master’s in English Literature and a TESOL certification. My diverse professional background allows me to bring fresh perspective, strong communication, and thoughtful intention to every aspect of my work in education.

Title Smart Writing: Capital Letters and Titles for Class 3 

This Grade 3 English worksheet helps students learn how to correctly capitalize titles of books, movies, magazines, cartoons, and stories. Capitalization rules are especially important when writing titles because they help readers recognize names of creative works clearly. 
Through engaging grammar activities, students practice identifying correct capitalization in titles like The Jungle Book, Moana, Frozen, and National Geographic. The exercises encourage learners to spot mistakes, correct capitalization, and understand how titles should appear in sentences. 

Why Capitalizing Titles Matters in Grammar? 

Titles of books, movies, magazines, and shows follow specific capitalization rules. For Grade 3 learners, this topic is important because: 
1. Titles like The Jungle Book, Peter Pan, and Treasure Island require capital letters for important words. 
2. Movie titles such as Moana, Encanto, and Cars begin with capital letters. 
3. Magazine and newspaper names like National Geographic and The Hindu follow title capitalization rules. 
4. Correct capitalization helps readers easily recognize the name of a book, movie, or publication. 

What’s Inside This Worksheet? 

This worksheet includes five engaging grammar activities that help students practice capitalization of titles: 

🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions 
Students choose the correctly capitalized title from multiple options. 

✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks 
Learners complete sentences using correctly capitalized titles from a word bank of movies, stories, and magazines. 

📋 Exercise 3 – Match the Following 
Students match incorrectly written titles with the correctly capitalized versions. 

📝 Exercise 4 – Underline the Words 
Children underline the correctly written title in each sentence. 

🌟 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Title Hunt 
Students read a paragraph and identify cartoon or show titles that need correct capitalization. 

Answer Key (For Parents & Educators) 

Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions 
1. Moana 
2. The Jungle Book 
3. Encanto 
4. Treasure Island 
5. Alice in Wonderland 
6. Cars 
7. The Hindu 
8. National Geographic 
9. Kung Fu Panda 
10. Peter Pan 

Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks 
1. Coco 
2. Panchatantra 
3. Frozen 
4. Toy Story 
5. Times of India 
6. Tenali Raman 
7. Reader’s Digest 
8. Cars 
9. Akbar Birbal 
10. Inside Out 

Exercise 3 – Match the Titles 
jurassic park → Jurassic Park 
gullivers travels → Gulliver’s Travels 
the secret garden → The Secret Garden 
amar chitra katha → Amar Chitra Katha 
discovery channel → Discovery Channel 
tinkle digest → Tinkle Digest 
cartoon network → Cartoon Network 
finding nemo → Finding Nemo 
the little prince → The Little Prince 
ratatouille → Ratatouille 

Exercise 4 – Correctly Written Titles 
1. Cinderella 
2. Pinocchio 
3. Snow White 
4. Mickey Mouse 
5. Dumbo 
6. Tom and Jerry 
7. Aladdin 
8. Bambi 
9. Kung Fu Panda 
10. The Three Little Pigs 

Exercise 5 – Correct Titles from the Paragraph 
1. Doraemon 
2. Rapunzel 
3. Chhota Bheem 
4. Ninja Hattori 
5. Oggy and the Cockroaches 
6. Dora the Explorer 
7. Motu Patlu 
8. Little Krishna 
9. Ben 10 
10. Mr Bean 
Help your child become confident in writing titles correctly by mastering capitalization rules for books, movies, and shows. With expert-led guidance and engaging grammar activities, students can strengthen their English writing skills step by step. 

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Frequently Asked Questions

Titles such as book titles use capital letters because they are proper nouns or important words.

Sentence activities allow students to practice placing capital letters in the correct title words.

Children may not know which words in a title must be capitalized.