Every sentence in the English language must have an end mark. There are three end marks: the period, the exclamation point, and the questions mark. The appropriate end mark depends on the type of sentence being used. There are four types of sentences in the English language: declarative, imperative, interrogative, and exclamatory. Click here to learn more about the four types of sentences.
Practice End Marks – Students read each sentence and decide whether to put a period, exclamation point, or question mark after each sentence. This worksheet is great way to start or finish a unit on sentence types.
Practice End Marks Worksheet | RTF
Practice End Marks Worksheet | PDF
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Practice End Marks Worksheet | Ereading Worksheet – Online Test
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Practice with End Marks 2 – Are your students still mastering end marks? Here is some practice to get them where they are going. This worksheet has over 30 problems to help your students achieve mastery.
Practice with End Marks 2 | RTF
Practice with End Marks 2 | PDF
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Practice with End Marks 2 | Answers
Practice with End Marks 2 | Ereading Worksheet – Online Reading Activity
Four Sentence Type Worksheets – Practice identifying the four types of sentences: declarative, imperative, exclamatory, and interrogative.
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Four Sentence Types Lesson – Teach students about the four types of sentences: interrogative, exclamatory, imperative, and declarative. This file includes a practice assessment after the lesson.
Four Sentence Types Lesson PPT
Common Core State Standards Related to End Marks
Expand to View All Common Core State Standards Related to End MarksCCSS.ELA-Literacy.CCRA.L.2 – Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English capitalization, punctuation, and spelling when writing.
ELA Standards: Language
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.K.2b – Recognize and name end punctuation.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.1.2b – Use end punctuation for sentences.
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