Grade 3 English Worksheet on Capitalization Rules

Grade 3 English Worksheet on Capitalization Rules
Grade 3 English Worksheet on Capitalization Rules

Grade 3 English Worksheet on Capitalization Rules

EnglishClass 3English GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Sumaiya Maniyar
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I am a dedicated educator and mentor with experience in public speaking, creative writing, and communication skills development. Currently associated with PlanetSpark, I work closely with students across age groups to build confidence, critical thinking, and expressive clarity through structured and engaging learning methods.

Capital Letters, Big Meaning: Capitalization Rules for Class 3

This Grade 3 English worksheet is designed to help young learners understand and apply capitalization rules for titles, headings, and sentences. Through structured and engaging grammar activities, students learn when to use capital letters correctly in names, places, days, months, books, brands, monuments, and at the beginning of sentences.

Why Capitalization Rules Matter in Grammar?

Capitalization is a key grammar skill that improves clarity and meaning in writing. For Grade 3 learners, this topic is important because:
1. Proper nouns like names, cities, rivers, and monuments must always begin with capital letters.
2. Every sentence starts with a capital letter, making writing clear and correct.
3. Titles of books, stories, and important places stand out when capitalized properly.
4. Correct capitalization builds strong writing habits and reduces common grammar mistakes.

What’s Inside This Worksheet?

This worksheet includes five carefully structured grammar activities for Class 3 students:

Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions 
Students select the correctly capitalized word in sentences related to names, cities, days, months, rivers, books, and monuments.

Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks (Option Bank) 
Learners complete sentences using correctly capitalized words such as names, professions, languages, places, and festivals.

Exercise 3 – Match the Following 
Students match pictures of famous places, brands, people, objects, and titles with their correctly capitalized names.

Exercise 4 – Underline the Words 
Students underline words that need capitalization and identify sentences that are already written correctly.

Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing 
Students apply capitalization rules in a paragraph by correcting names, titles, places, brands, and honorifics in context.

Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)

Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions 
1. Treasures 
2. Arjun 
3. New Delhi 
4. Monday 
5. Ganges 
6. January 
7. August 
8. India 
9. Clever 
10. Friday 

Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks 
1. English 
2. Peacock 
3. Meera 
4. Doctor 
5. Ramadan 
6. Himalayas 
7. Japanese 
8. Rohan 
9. Captain 
10. Lotus 

Exercise 3 – Match the Following 
1. Jupiter 
2. Lion King 
3. Disney 
4. England 
5. Titanic 
6. Google 
7. Cadbury 
8. Einstein 
9. Maggi 
10. Doctor 

Exercise 4 – Correctly Capitalized Sentences 
1. I like the boy Ravi. 
2. It is very hot now. 
3. Look at the bright moon. 
4. The Taj Mahal is big. 
5. He saw Delhi city. 
6. Asha sings well. 
7. We like to speak Hindi. 
8. Riya is at the school. 
9. Neha is in Agra now. 
10. I like to eat Maggi. 

Exercise 5 – Paragraph Capitalization 
Major, Army, Heroes, Aman, Camlin, Victory, Tatar, Charminar, Lesson, Mister

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Frequently Asked Questions

Children should capitalize sentence beginnings, proper nouns, titles, and important headings.

They focus more on spelling and meaning and often overlook writing conventions.

Repeated correction exercises train students to spot and fix capitalization errors confidently.