

This Grade 6 worksheet focuses on the correct use of comparative and superlative adverbs. Students will practice forming and using these adverbs in various sentences through multiple-choice questions, fill-in-the-blanks, true/false statements, and paragraph writing. The worksheet will help students understand how to compare actions and qualities using adverbs.
Why Comparative & Superlative Adverbs Matter in Grammar?
Comparative and superlative adverbs are essential for making comparisons between actions or qualities. Understanding their use is crucial for effective communication. For Grade 6 learners, this topic is important because:
1. It helps students form correct comparative and superlative adverbs.
2. It improves sentence construction, clarity, and comparison of actions.
3. It enhances the ability to express comparisons in a more descriptive manner.
This worksheet includes engaging grammar activities focusing on comparative and superlative adverbs:
🧠 **Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions**
Students will select the correct adverb to complete the sentence. Example: "He ran ____ than me."
Options: a) faster, b) more fast, c) fastest.
✏️ **Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks**
Students will complete sentences with the appropriate comparative or superlative adverb. Example: "He works ____ than everyone."
Options: more hard, harder, most hard.
📋 **Exercise 3 – True or False**
Students will determine whether each sentence uses the comparative or superlative adverb correctly. Example: "She speaks more clearly than anyone else." (True/False).
📝 **Exercise 4 – Underline the Incorrect Adverb**
Students will underline the incorrect comparative or superlative adverb. Example: "He runs more quicker than the others." (Incorrect: 'more quicker' should be 'quicker').
✅ **Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing**
Students will fill in the blanks in a paragraph with suitable comparative or superlative adverbs. Example: "He ran ___________ than me."
**Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions**
1. a) faster
2. b) harder
3. c) quickly
4. a) skillfully
5. a) most beautiful
6. b) quicker
7. b) faster
8. a) most skillfully
9. a) most carefully
10. c) most clearly
**Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks**
1. faster
2. harder
3. more quickly
4. skillfully
5. most skillfully
6. more carefully
7. most quickly
8. more deeply
9. faster
10. most easily
**Exercise 3 – True or False**
1. True
2. False (Correct: more quicker → quicker)
3. True
4. True
5. False (Correct: most → more)
6. True
7. False (Correct: most hard → harder)
8. False (Correct: more fast → faster)
9. True
10. True
**Exercise 4 – Underline the Incorrect Adverb**
1. He runs **more quicker** than the others. (Incorrect: more quicker → quicker)
2. She answered **more correctly** than I did. (Incorrect: more correctly → correctly)
3. They played **better** than I. (Correct)
4. She sang the **most beautiful**. (Incorrect: most beautiful → most beautifully)
5. He is the **most fastest** runner. (Incorrect: most fastest → fastest)
6. He ran **more faster** than the others. (Incorrect: more faster → faster)
7. He completed it **most quicker**. (Incorrect: most quicker → quicker)
8. She works **hardly** than him. (Incorrect: hardly → harder)
9. They ran **quickest** than us. (Incorrect: quickest → faster)
10. He finished **faster** than anyone. (Correct)
**Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing**
1. faster
2. most carefully
3. quicker
4. skillfully
5. most quickly
6. most carefully
7. faster
8. quicker
9. most easily
10. most carefully
Help your child master comparative and superlative adverbs today with a Free 1:1 Grammar Skills Trial Class at PlanetSpark.
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Comparative adverbs compare two actions (e.g., "She runs faster"), while superlative adverbs compare three or more actions (e.g., "She runs the fastest").
Students often mix up forms, like saying "more faster" instead of "faster."
Through exercises that involve comparing actions, such as "Which student reads more fluently?"