

This Grade 5 worksheet gives students focused, hands-on practice with coordinating conjunctions — the small but powerful words that connect ideas, show contrast, present choices, and express results in sentences. Covering the core four (and, but, or, so) along with their extended family (yet, for, nor), this worksheet helps students understand not just what coordinating conjunctions are, but how each one changes the relationship between the ideas it connects.
At Class 5, students are expected to write compound sentences fluently and use conjunctions accurately in both speaking and writing. Simply memorising a list is not enough — students must understand that "I studied hard and I passed" and "I studied hard but I failed" are structurally similar yet completely different in meaning. This worksheet builds that crucial distinction through five carefully designed exercises using relatable, everyday Indian contexts.
Coordinating conjunctions are the building blocks of compound sentences. For Grade 5 learners, mastering them matters because:
1. They join two equally important ideas, clauses, words, or phrases — making writing more fluent and less choppy.
2. Each conjunction carries a specific meaning: and adds, but contrasts, or offers a choice, so shows result, yet surprises, for explains reason, nor negates both sides.
3. Using the wrong conjunction completely changes a sentence's meaning — a critical skill for reading comprehension and writing accuracy.
4. The seven coordinating conjunctions (FANBOYS: For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So) are tested consistently from Class 5 upward.
5. Strong conjunction use is the foundation for learning subordinating conjunctions, complex sentences, and essay writing in higher grades.
This worksheet includes five grammar-rich activities that build fluency with coordinating conjunctions:
Exercise 1 – Fill in the Blanks
Students fill ten blanks using conjunctions from a word bank (plus, not, or, so, also, but, yet, and, for, then). Sentences include contrasting ideas (studied hard but still failed), cause-and-result (raining so stayed indoors), choices (tea or coffee), and additions (went to Agra and saw the Taj Mahal) — covering the full range of conjunction functions.
Exercise 2 – True or False
Students evaluate ten conceptual statements about coordinating conjunctions and mark them true or false. This exercise tests deeper understanding — including facts like "there are seven coordinating conjunctions," the correct use of nor with negatives, and the distinction between yet (contrast) and similarity.
Exercise 3 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students choose the correct conjunction from three options to complete ten sentences. Questions target the most commonly confused conjunctions — but vs yet for contrast, or for choice, so for result, nor for double negatives — using everyday contexts like weather, food, and school life.
Exercise 4 – Sentence Rewriting / Error Correction
Students identify the incorrect conjunction in each sentence and rewrite it with the correct one from the word bank. Errors include using so instead of but for contrast, and instead of or for a choice, because instead of yet for an unexpected result, and nor instead of and — building sharp editing skills and a clear sense of conjunction meaning.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing
Students write a paragraph about their hobbies using at least four coordinating conjunctions. This open-ended creative task brings grammar to life, helping students move from isolated sentence practice to fluent, conjunction-rich personal writing.
Exercise 1 – Fill in the Blanks
1. so
2. also
3. yet
4. or
5. but
6. plus
7. and
8. then
9. not
10. for
Exercise 2 – True or False
1. True
2. False
3. True
4. True
5. False
6. False
7. True
8. False
9. False
10. True
Exercise 3 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. b) but
2. c) or
3. c) yet
4. a) but
5. a) or
6. c) but
7. b) nor
8. b) or
9. a) but
10. c) for
Exercise 4 – Sentence Rewriting (Corrected Sentences)
1. I like apples but I dislike oranges.
2. We went to Delhi and visited the fort.
3. Do you want pizza or pasta for dinner?
4. The weather was good so we went out.
5. He is tall yet he cannot play basketball.
6. She studied hard yet / but she failed.
7. He neither sings nor dances.
8. The food was delicious but expensive.
9. I did not study nor did I cheat.
10. We can go or we can stay.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing
Answers may vary.
Sample Answer: I have many hobbies that keep me busy and happy after school. I love reading storybooks, but I also enjoy painting in my free time. On weekends, I either go cycling with my friends or spend time gardening with my mother. I sometimes feel tired after school, yet I always make time for at least one hobby every evening. My favourite hobby is reading because it takes me to new worlds and teaches me new words. My parents encourage all my hobbies, so I feel very lucky and supported. Having hobbies makes me feel joyful, creative, and full of energy every day.
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Coordinating conjunctions like and, but, or, nor, for, so, and yet connect words, phrases, or clauses.
Choosing the right conjunction based on the sentence’s meaning can confuse learners.
Worksheets provide practice exercises that help children connect sentences logically with the right conjunctions.