Class 7 Vocabulary Worksheet on Advanced Collocations

Class 7 Vocabulary Worksheet on Advanced Collocations
Class 7 Vocabulary Worksheet on Advanced Collocations

Class 7 Vocabulary Worksheet on Advanced Collocations

Class 7EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Yogita Sethi
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I am a dedicated and student-focused educator with experience in teaching English grammar, vocabulary, and communication skills to young learners. I specialize in creating clear, engaging, and age-appropriate worksheets that make learning simple and enjoyable. My goal is to help students build strong language foundations with confidence and curiosity.

Action Packed: Advanced Collocations for Grade 7

This Grade 7 English grammar worksheet focuses on Advanced Collocations involving Verb + Adverb pairs. It helps students understand which adverbs naturally modify which verbs to convey specific meanings. The worksheet includes multiple-choice questions, word pair selection, matching exercises, error correction, and a paragraph fill-in-the-blank activity.

Why Advanced Collocations Matter in Grammar?

Advanced collocations teach students to pair verbs with the most appropriate adverbs. For Grade 7 learners, this topic is important because:
1. It enhances descriptive writing and speaking skills.
2. It prevents awkward or incorrect verb-adverb pairings.
3. It builds a more sophisticated vocabulary range.
4. It improves listening and reading comprehension through understanding nuance.

What’s Inside This Worksheet?

This worksheet includes five grammar-rich activities that build fluency with verb + adverb collocations:

🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students choose the most suitable adverb to complete sentences like "The wind blew ________ during the storm" and "She smiled ________ at her friend."

✏️ Exercise 2 – Choose One Word from Each Pair
Students select the correct adverb or base form from pairs like "soundly/sound" and "hard/hardly."

πŸ“‹ Exercise 3 – Match the Following
Learners match adverbs like "magnificently," "patiently," and "sincerely" to the sentences they best complete.

πŸ“ Exercise 4 – Underline One Incorrect Word
Students find the wrong adverb in sentences (e.g., "The dog barked gently") and rewrite them correctly.

✍️ Exercise 5 – Paragraph Fill-in-the-Blanks
A paragraph about Riya working on a project requires adverbs like "diligently," "carefully," and "wearily" to complete the narrative.

βœ… Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)

Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. c) fiercely
2. b) warmly
3. b) carefully
4. a) clearly
5. c) loudly
6. a) beautifully
7. b) hard
8. a) anxiously
9. c) brightly
10. c) sincerely

Exercise 2 – Choose One Word from Each Pair
1. soundly 
2. politely
3. hard
4. closely
5. deeply
6. carefully
7. quickly
8. well
9. patiently
10. completely

Exercise 3 – Match the Following
1. furiously
2. rapid
3. patiently
4. attentively
5. diligently
6. furiously
7. instant
8. patiently
9. sincerely
10. magnificently

Exercise 4 – Corrected Sentences
1. The dog barked fiercely at the thief.
2. He ran quickly to catch the bus.
3. The sun shone brightly at noon.
4. It ended quickly after the crash.
5. The rain fell downward from the sky.
6. She sang happily at the concert.
7. He worked hard to win the race.
8. She smiled warmly at her best friend.
9. They fought bravely against the enemy.
10. He spoke politely to his teacher.

Exercise 5 – Paragraph Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. loudly
2. quickly
3. closely
4. carefully
5. true
6. wearily
7. steadily
8. pure
9. slowly
10. warm

or 
Answers may vary

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Frequently Asked Questions

Advanced collocations are natural word combinations like "make a decision" or "conduct a meeting" that native speakers use. Learning them helps Grade 7 students write and speak more fluently, avoiding awkward or direct translations.

Worksheets that require matching verbs to specific nouns, such as "take responsibility" or "pay attention," help students memorize these fixed pairs through repetition rather than just isolated word lists.

Examiners look for natural language usage; using correct collocations prevents errors like "do homework" (correct) vs "make homework" (incorrect), which can significantly boost a student's grammar score.