

This Grade 5 English grammar worksheet focuses on helping students understand and correctly use commas in a series. Commas are an essential punctuation mark that help separate items in a list and make sentences clearer and easier to read. Through structured practice, students learn how commas organize information when three or more items appear together in a sentence.
In this worksheet, learners explore the concept of commas in lists using engaging exercises designed for Class 5 students. Activities include multiple-choice questions, true or false identification, fill-in-the-blanks, sentence correction, and paragraph-based practice. Each activity gradually builds a student’s confidence in recognizing and applying correct comma usage in everyday writing.
Commas play an important role in organizing ideas clearly when multiple items are listed in a sentence. For Grade 5 learners, this concept is important because:
1. Commas separate three or more items in a list.
2. They improve sentence clarity and readability.
3. They help students avoid confusion when writing descriptions or lists.
4. They strengthen punctuation skills required for paragraph writing and essays.
This worksheet includes five grammar-focused exercises that help students practice commas in a series in different ways.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice (Correct Comma Usage)
Students read three sentence options and choose the sentence that correctly uses commas in a list.
Exercise 2 – True or False
Students identify whether commas are used correctly in each sentence. This improves punctuation awareness.
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
Students insert the missing comma in sentences containing lists of items.
Exercise 4 – Sentence Correction
Students replace one incorrect word in each sentence using a suitable word from the word bank. This helps them understand how lists should logically group similar items.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Completion
Students read a short paragraph about a visit to the market and fill in the blanks with commas to correctly separate items in each list.
Exercise 1 – Choose the Correct Sentence
1. a
2. b
3. c
4. c
5. a
6. b
7. c
8. a
9. c
10. c
Exercise 2 – True or False
1. True
2. False
3. False
4. True
5. True
6. False
7. True
8. False
9. True
10. True
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks (Comma Placement)
1. Simi bought apples, mangoes and pears.
2. The shelf has textbooks, maps and charts.
3. The art room has paintbrush, colors and sheets.
4. The children carried lunchboxes, bottles and spoons.
5. The students wore raincoats, caps and boots.
6. The library keeps storybook, comics and tales.
7. The bag had workbooks, papers and files.
8. Kartik bought apples, bananas and mangoes.
9. Kriti packed textbooks, notebooks and bottle.
10. The shelf kept storybook, pens and chalk.
Exercise 4 – Replace One Wrong Word (Sample Answers)
1. Ritika packed notebooks, pencils and pens.
2. The art room has paintbrush, colors and sheets.
3. The children carried lunchboxes, bottles and spoons.
4. The shelf has textbooks, maps and charts.
5. The students wore raincoats, caps and boots.
6. The library keeps storybook, comics and tales.
7. The bag had workbooks, papers and files.
8. Kartik bought apples, bananas and mangoes.
9. Kriti packed textbooks, notebooks and bottle.
10. The shelf kept storybook, pens and chalk.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Comma Placement
1. apples, bananas and grapes
2. potatoes, tomatoes and carrots
3. rice, dal and oil
4. soap, toothpaste and shampoo
5. notebooks, pens and pencils
6. biscuits, chips and juice
7. mangoes, oranges and guavas
8. candles, matches and batteries
9. apples, bananas and grapes
Help your child strengthen punctuation skills and write clearer sentences with expert-led grammar learning and personalized guidance from experienced educators.
Commas in a series separate three or more items in a list. This grammar rule helps Class 5 students write clear sentences in CBSE English writing.
A simple example is “I bought apples, bananas, and oranges.” English grammar worksheets help students practice listing items correctly with commas.
Many children write lists without punctuation because they focus only on words. Grammar worksheets train learners to separate items properly for clearer reading.