

This Grade 7 worksheet is designed to strengthen students’ understanding of relative pronouns through practical sentence-based grammar activities. Focusing on the important linking words who, which, that, and whose, this worksheet helps learners understand how pronouns connect nouns with additional information in a sentence. Relative pronouns are a key part of sentence fluency, sentence expansion, and descriptive writing, making this topic highly valuable for middle school grammar development.
Relative pronouns help combine ideas smoothly and avoid repetitive sentence structures. For Grade 7 learners, this concept is essential because:
1. Relative pronouns connect a noun with more information.
2. They improve sentence variety and sentence fluency.
3. They help students write longer and more meaningful descriptions.
4. They are commonly used in stories, essays, and formal grammar tasks.
This worksheet includes five grammar-rich activities that build confidence with relative pronouns:
🧠 Exercise 1 – Underline the Relative Pronouns
Students read ten well-formed sentences and underline the relative pronouns used in each. This helps learners visually identify who, which, that, and whose in natural sentence contexts.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students choose the sentence that uses the correct relative pronoun. These MCQs train students to distinguish between pronouns used for people, things, and possession.
📋 Exercise 3 – Sentence Rewriting
Learners rewrite incorrect sentences by replacing the wrong relative pronoun with the correct one. This improves editing ability and grammar correction skills.
📝 Exercise 4 – Paragraph Fill in the Blanks
Students complete a thematic paragraph by inserting suitable relative pronouns in context. This activity develops grammar understanding inside connected writing rather than isolated sentences.
🌟 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing
Students write their own paragraph on “A Person Who Inspires You” using relative pronouns in self-created sentences. This encourages creative writing with direct grammar application.
This worksheet offers a complete progression from identification to correction to guided usage and finally independent writing, making relative pronouns easier to understand and use correctly in daily English writing.
✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)
Exercise 1 – Underline the Relative Pronouns
1. who
2. that
3. whose
4. that
5. whose
6. which
7. who
8. that
9. which
10. which
Exercise 2 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. b)
2. c)
3. a)
4. b)
5. a)
6. c)
7. b)
8. b)
9. c)
10.b)
Exercise 3 – Rewrite the Sentences
1. The boy who won the medal waved.
2. The book that is on the desk is mine.
3. Ravi met a coach who trained him.
4. This is the girl whose bag is torn.
5. The shop that sells uniforms is closed.
6. Meera found a pen that was broken.
7. I know a singer who lives in Pune.
8. The bus that goes to Chennai is full.
9. This is the cat that chased mice.
10. Raj saw a player whose shoes were muddy.
Exercise 4 – Fill in the Blanks
1. which
2. who
3. whose
4. that
5. who
6. which
7. whose
8. that
9. who
10. who
Exercise 5 – Sample Paragraph Writing
My mother is the person who inspires me the most. She is a woman whose hard work teaches me never to give up. She helps everyone who needs support and always speaks kindly. I admire the patience that she shows in difficult times. She is the person who encourages me to study well and stay honest. The values that I learn from her are very important. She is someone whose love makes our home happy. I want to become a person who is caring and strong like her.
Help your child master sentence connection and descriptive grammar with engaging expert-designed English practice at PlanetSpark.
They connect clauses like who which and that.
They link ideas smoothly in sentences.
Through sentence completion tasks.