Commonly confused verbs Worksheets
Ages 8-9 · 3 worksheets · 3 total pages · Free previews · Print-ready PDFs
Free printable commonly confused verbs worksheets for 3rd grade students (Ages 8-9). Part of our action verbs verbs collection. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards.

Preview of Commonly confused verbs - Can and may. 3 variations available.
All Commonly confused verbs Worksheets
Worksheet Details
| Grade | 3rd Grade |
| Subject | Grammar & Writing |
| Topic | Verbs |
| Standard | L.3.1.A |
| Pages | 3 pages |
| Difficulty | Medium |
More action verbs worksheets
Explore all of our 3rd grade action verbs worksheets.
FAQ
What grade level are these action verbs worksheets for?⌄
These action verbs worksheets are designed for 3rd Grade students (Ages 8-9). Print any one in the set for targeted practice, or download them together as a packet.
Can I use these for homeschool or the classroom?⌄
Yes. These worksheets work for homeschool, classroom, and tutoring. Use them as a morning warm-up, an independent center activity, or a fast-finisher task.
What verb skills should third graders learn beyond basic tenses?⌄
Third graders expand their verb knowledge to include subject-verb agreement, helping verbs (also called auxiliary verbs), and linking verbs. CCSS L.3.1f requires students to ensure subject-verb agreement: singular subjects take singular verbs (The dog runs) and plural subjects take plural verbs (The dogs run). Students learn helping verbs (is, am, are, was, were, has, have, had, do, does, did, will, would, could, should, can, may, might) that combine with main verbs to show time, ability, or possibility. Linking verbs (is, are, was, were, seem, become, feel, look) connect the subject to a word that describes or renames it. Worksheets that ask students to identify the type of verb in a sentence (action, linking, helping), correct subject-verb agreement errors, and use helping verbs to change meaning ("She can swim" versus "She should swim") build comprehensive verb knowledge that supports more sophisticated writing and reading comprehension.
How do I teach subject-verb agreement to a third grader?⌄
The core rule is simple: singular subjects pair with singular verbs and plural subjects pair with plural verbs. The confusing part is that singular verbs often end in s (he runs, she sings, it falls) while plural verbs do not (they run, we sing, the leaves fall), which is the opposite of how nouns work. Start with clear examples using "he" and "they": "He walks" versus "They walk." Then practice with noun subjects: "The boy walks" versus "The boys walk." The tricky cases for third graders include compound subjects ("Mom and Dad are" not "Mom and Dad is"), sentences with prepositional phrases between subject and verb ("The box of crayons is" not "The box of crayons are"), and indefinite pronouns (everyone, nobody, each are singular). Worksheets that highlight the subject and ask students to choose the correct verb form build the skill. Reading sentences aloud also helps because incorrect agreement often "sounds wrong" to native speakers. CCSS L.3.1f makes subject-verb agreement a priority third grade skill.
What are helping verbs and why do third graders need to learn them?⌄
Helping verbs (auxiliary verbs) work alongside main verbs to express shades of meaning that the main verb alone cannot convey. They show time ("She is running" shows action happening now, "She was running" shows past continuous action, "She will run" shows future), ability ("She can run"), possibility ("She might run"), obligation ("She should run"), and permission ("She may run"). Third graders need helping verbs because they are writing longer, more complex narratives and explanations that require these nuances. Without helping verbs, students are limited to simple past, present, and future. With them, they can express ongoing actions, possibilities, and obligations that make their writing more precise and their reading comprehension deeper. Common helping verbs include: am, is, are, was, were, be, been, being, have, has, had, do, does, did, will, would, shall, should, can, could, may, might, and must. Worksheets that present sentences and ask students to identify the helping verb and explain what meaning it adds develop both recognition and understanding, supporting CCSS L.3.1 language standards.
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