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Jumbled Sentences | English Olympiad for Class 3 PDF Download

Introduction

Jumbled sentences are a series of sentences that are disorganized or not in the correct order. Our task is to read and understand these sentences, then rearrange them in a coherent and logical sequence. Jumbled sentences often appear as questions, asking students to rearrange or order the words into a coherent sentence. This is a popular method for teaching sentence formation. In these questions, words that, when correctly combined, form a meaningful sentence are presented in a random order.

Jumbled Sentences Examples

Students should be able to recognize the potential for a meaningful sentence and solve the jumbled sentences. These exercises can be presented in paragraph form, where multiple sentences are mixed up and must be rearranged. Let's explore some examples of English jumbled words along with their solutions.

For example, the sentence can be

  • ‘I am going to a birthday party today with my friend Meena.’
  • While the question presented can be in the following way,
  • birthday/today/friend/I/Meena/a/my/with/going/am/to/party.

The question can also be in a different form where the students will be presented with simple jumbled sentences with answers and they just have to rearrange them correctly. Let us look at an example.

Here are some other solved jumbled words examples.

Jumbled Sentences | English Olympiad for Class 3

Ans: Clock

Jumbled Sentences | English Olympiad for Class 3

Ans: Globe

Rules to Solve Jumbled Sentences

  • One can answer such questions with ease, if they have the knowledge of certain rules to form a sentence with jumbled words, which are as follows:
  • Try to figure out what the theme of the paragraph or sentence is. This can be accomplished by looking for words that appear frequently throughout the sentence.
  • Other relative pronouns like who, whom, that, what, and which, and indefinite pronouns like everybody, anybody, no one, nobody, both, one, some, other none can be the first word in a sentence.
  • If there are articles like ‘a’, ‘an’, and ‘the’ at the beginning of a sentence, most of the time they are placed at the starting of the paragraph.
The document Jumbled Sentences | English Olympiad for Class 3 is a part of the Class 3 Course English Olympiad for Class 3.
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