Classweekly

Free Nouns Worksheets for All Grades

Preschool through 5th Grade · Print-ready PDFs

Identifying Nouns - Lion
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Identifying Nouns - Panda
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Identifying Nouns - Snake
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Possessive Nouns - Fox

Possessive Nouns - Fox

Grade1st Grade
TopicNouns
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Proper & Common Nouns - Cactus
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Writing Plural Nouns - Bowling
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Writing Plural Nouns - Pencil
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Common vs proper nouns - Book
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Identifying nouns - Cat

Identifying nouns - Cat

Grade2nd Grade
TopicNouns
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Irregular plural nouns - Toilet
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Nouns ending in 'y' - Yoga
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Using nouns - Baby Wolf

Using nouns - Baby Wolf

Grade2nd Grade
TopicNouns
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Using nouns - Bear

Using nouns - Bear

Grade2nd Grade
TopicNouns
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Using nouns - Shark

Using nouns - Shark

Grade2nd Grade
TopicNouns
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Using Proper nouns - NYC
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Writing plural nouns - Farm
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Common vs Proper Nouns

Common vs Proper Nouns

Grade1st Grade
TopicNouns
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Abstract nouns - Moon

Abstract nouns - Moon

Grade3rd Grade
TopicNouns
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Abstract nouns - Saturn

Abstract nouns - Saturn

Grade3rd Grade
TopicNouns
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Abstract nouns - Sun

Abstract nouns - Sun

Grade3rd Grade
TopicNouns
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Collective nouns - Bee

Collective nouns - Bee

Grade3rd Grade
TopicNouns
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What is ClassWeekly?

ClassWeekly offers free worksheets and printable learning resources for kids in preschool to grade 5. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards and designed by educators. Become a member to access the full library and download unlimited PDFs.

What K-5 grammar and writing worksheets are on ClassWeekly?

Grammar and writing worksheets on ClassWeekly cover parts of speech, punctuation, capitalization, verb tenses, sentence structure, spelling, handwriting, and paragraph writing for kindergarten through 5th grade. Every worksheet aligns to a specific Common Core L (language) or W (writing) standard and prints on one sheet. Grammar and writing are combined into one hub because strong grammar is the foundation of clear writing.

Grammar and writing live in the same hub on ClassWeekly because the lines blur. Knowing what a noun is matters because you'll write better sentences with that knowledge. Knowing how to use a comma matters because your writing will be readable. ClassWeekly merged writing into the grammar subject in April 2026 to reflect how the work actually flows in classrooms.

This hub covers parts of speech (nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, interjections), sentence structure (simple, compound, complex), punctuation (commas, end marks, apostrophes, quotation marks, semicolons), capitalization rules, verb tenses (past, present, future, perfect, progressive), spelling patterns and rules, cursive writing, paragraph writing, and longer essay writing. Every worksheet is aligned to a specific Common Core ELA standard, either L (language) or W (writing).

Grammar is one of those subjects where short daily practice beats long weekend sessions. Ten minutes a day on a single skill (apostrophes one week, verb tenses the next) builds long-term mastery. Mixed grammar reviews are useful but only after the individual skills are solid.

If your kid struggles with writing, the fix is often grammar mechanics. A kid who's strong on parts of speech, sentence types, and basic punctuation usually writes more clearly. Diagram a few sentences. Label the nouns and verbs. Notice what makes a sentence sound right.

Cursive writing is in this hub for kids whose schools still teach it. Worksheets cover letter formation in print and cursive, plus letter tracing for early grades.

Last reviewed: April 2026

Common questions about grammar worksheets