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    Class 4 Grammar Worksheet on Relative Pronouns (who, whom, which, that)

    Class 4EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
    Kajal Mishra
    Kajal MishraVisit Profile
    I am an enthusiastic and dedicated English educator at PlanetSpark. I am passionate about helping students develop strong communication and public speaking skills while building their confidence and creativity. My teaching approach focuses on making learning fun, interactive, and meaningful so that every student feels inspired to express themselves effectively in English.
    Class 4 Grammar Worksheet on Relative Pronouns (who, whom, which, that)
    Class 4 Grammar Worksheet on Relative Pronouns (who, whom, which, that)

    Class 4 Grammar Worksheet on Relative Pronouns (who, whom, which, that)

    Class 4EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
    Kajal Mishra
    Kajal MishraVisit Profile
    I am an enthusiastic and dedicated English educator at PlanetSpark. I am passionate about helping students develop strong communication and public speaking skills while building their confidence and creativity. My teaching approach focuses on making learning fun, interactive, and meaningful so that every student feels inspired to express themselves effectively in English.

    Connect Ideas Clearly: Relative Pronouns for Class 4 

    This Grade 4 grammar worksheet helps students understand and practice relative pronouns such as who, whom, which, and that. Relative pronouns are important words that connect ideas and give extra information about a person, place, animal, or thing in a sentence. 

    Through engaging grammar activities, learners explore how relative pronouns link two related ideas smoothly. The worksheet includes exercises such as true or false questions, multiple-choice sentence selection, fill in the blanks, sentence rewriting, and paragraph completion. These tasks help students recognize how relative pronouns function in everyday communication. 

    Students learn how who is used for people, which is generally used for animals or things, whom is used when the pronoun acts as the object in a sentence, and that can refer to both people and objects. By practicing with real-life examples, learners understand how sentences become clearer and more detailed when relative pronouns are used correctly. 

    This worksheet gradually moves from concept checking to sentence-level practice and finally to paragraph writing. This step-by-step structure helps children build a strong understanding of relative pronouns while improving reading comprehension and writing clarity. 

    Why Relative Pronouns Matter in Grammar? 

    Relative pronouns help connect ideas and provide additional information about nouns in a sentence. For Grade 4 learners, this concept is important because: 

    1. Relative pronouns join two related ideas in a sentence. 
    2. They help describe people, objects, animals, and places clearly. 
    3. Words like who, whom, which, and that make sentences more detailed. 
    4. They improve sentence flow and reduce repetition. 
    5. Learning them helps students write clearer and more descriptive sentences. 

    What’s Inside This Worksheet? 

    This worksheet includes five grammar-focused activities that strengthen the understanding of relative pronouns. 

    Exercise 1 – True or False 
    Students read statements about relative pronouns and decide whether each statement is true or false. This activity checks their conceptual understanding of how these pronouns function in sentences. 

    Exercise 2 – Choose the Correct Sentence 
    Students select the sentence that correctly uses a relative pronoun. This helps learners recognize correct grammar and understand when to use who, whom, which, or that. 

    Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks 
    Students fill in the blanks with the correct relative pronoun from the given options. This activity builds accuracy in choosing the appropriate pronoun based on the noun being described. 

    Exercise 4 – Underline and Rewrite 
    Students identify the relative pronoun in each sentence and rewrite the sentence correctly. This helps them recognize how relative pronouns connect ideas. 

    Exercise 5 – Paragraph Completion 
    Students complete a short paragraph using suitable relative pronouns. This contextual activity allows learners to apply their understanding of relative pronouns in connected writing. 

    Answer Key (For Parents and Educators) 

    Exercise 1 – True or False 
    1. True 
    2. True 
    3. True 
    4. True 
    5. False 
    6. True 
    7. True 
    8. False 
    9. True 
    10. True 

    Exercise 2 – Choose the Correct Sentence 
    1. This is the boy who won today. 
    2. Anita met the teacher who helped her. 
    3. This is the book that I borrowed. 
    4. The girl who bag is red is here. 
    5. Here is the dog that chased the cat. 
    6. I know the person whom you called. 
    7. This is the car which my uncle bought. 
    8. The boy who sits near me is Ravi. 
    9. This is the shop that sells toys. 
    10. The man whom you saw today is my uncle. 

    Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks 
    1. who 
    2. which 
    3. who 
    4. which 
    5. who 
    6. which 
    7. who 
    8. that 
    9. whom 
    10. which 

    Exercise 4 – Rewritten Sentences 
    1. Aarav met a boy who plays cricket every evening. 
    2. Meera thanked the teacher who helped her in the project. 
    3. This is the book which explains the solar system. 
    4. Kabir saw a dog that was chasing a ball. 
    5. Riya visited a park which has a large fountain. 
    6. The girl who won the drawing competition smiled proudly. 
    7. This is the pen that writes very smoothly. 
    8. I met a woman whom everyone respects in the village. 
    9. The movie which we watched yesterday was funny. 
    10. The boy whom Anaya helped thanked her kindly. 

    Exercise 5 – Sample Paragraph with Answers 

    One bright morning in Hyderabad, Aarav visited a science exhibition that had many creative models and exciting experiments. At the entrance he met a student who explained a robot that could walk, talk, and follow simple commands. Inside the hall, he noticed a drone which flew slowly above the crowd and a machine that cleaned the floor automatically. Soon he met a guide who showed a smart project that used solar energy to run small lights and fans. Aarav also spoke to a girl who presented a model bridge that could hold heavy weight. Before leaving, he thanked the teacher who helped students and the volunteers who answered every question patiently. 

    Help your child improve sentence clarity and writing skills by learning how to connect ideas effectively with relative pronouns. 

    🔖Book a free trial!

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Use "who" for people, "whom" for formal objects, and "that" for things or animals.

    They often mix up "who" and "whom" or overuse "that."

    They provide sentence examples and exercises for practice.

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