Common/Proper Nouns
Plural or Possessive?
Identifying Antecedents
Pronoun Case
Sentence Review
100

My teacher gave the class a book.

teacher, class, book: all common

100

The (child's/children's/childs) backpack was left on the bus.

child's

100

Maria forgot [her] lunch at home.

Maria

100

[She] finished her homework before dinner.

subjective

100

The cat slept on the couch all day. 

Fragment, Run-on, or Correct?

Correct

200

Sarah walked her dog to the park.

Sarah- proper; dog, park- common

200

All three (teacher's/teachers/teachers') desks were covered in papers.

teachers'

200

The dog wagged [its] tail when the kids came home.

dog

200

The coach gave [him] the starting position.

objective

200

Running through the park on a sunny afternoon. 

Fragment, Run-on, or Correct?

Fragment

300

The students visited the museum in Chicago on Friday.

Chicago, Friday- proper; students, museum- common

300

The (library's/libraries/libraries') new books arrived just in time for the reading contest.

library's

300

After Jake and Marcus finished practice, [they] went to get pizza. 


Jake and Marcus

300

After the argument, Marcus apologized to [her] and admitted that [he] had been wrong.

objective, subjective

300

Marcus loves pizza he could eat it every single day.

Fragment, Run-on, or Correct? 

Run-on

400

Dr. Patel assigned a chapter from the textbook about the Amazon River.

Dr. Patel, Amazon River- proper; chapter, textbook- common

400

The (women's/womens/womens') soccer team won all of their (game's/games/games') this season.

women's, games

400

The teacher handed the students [their] graded tests and told [them] to review the mistakes.

students

400

Jaylen built himself that entire bookshelf.

Reflexive

400

After the storm knocked out the power, the whole neighborhood. 

Fragment, Run-on, or Correct?

Fragment

500

After lunch, Coach Rivera told the team that their game against Lincoln Middle School would be held at Riverside Park.

Coach Rivera, Lincoln Middle School, Riverside Park- proper; lunch, team, game- common

500

The (teacher's/teachers/teachers') meeting ran long, so all four (classroom's/classrooms/classrooms') schedules were delayed.

teachers', classrooms'

500

When the principal visited Mrs. Rivera's class, [she] told [her] that the students had done an excellent job on [their] projects.

she/her- unclear, their- students

500

The principal [herself] announced that the award would go to [him] and [me], not [they].

intensive, objective, objective, subjective (but wrong, should be them- objective)

500

The students finished their projects they were proud of their work the teacher displayed them in the hallway it looked amazing. 

Fix this sentence

The students finished their projects. They were proud of their work. The teacher displayed them in the hallway. It looked amazing.