Class 8 Editing and Omission Worksheet



Class 8 Editing and Omission Worksheet

Fix It Right: Editing and Omission Skills for Class 8
This grammar worksheet helps Class 8 students develop precision in writing by identifying and correcting errors in sentence structure, grammar, spelling, and punctuation. It includes both editing (error correction) and omission (missing word) activities to enhance clarity and accuracy in written English.
Why Editing and Omission Matter in Class 8?
This worksheet helps students:
1. Spot errors in real-world sentence constructions.
2. Correct grammar, spelling, and verb tense issues independently.
3. Build confidence in proofreading and sentence rewriting.
What’s Inside This Worksheet?
This worksheet includes five practice-rich activities:
📝 Exercise 1 – Editing Errors
Students correct grammar, spelling, or tense errors in 8 everyday sentences. Example: “My sister cryed.” → “cried”
✍️ Exercise 2 – Omission (Missing Determiners)
Students identify the missing word (like *a, an, the*) and fill the blank appropriately.
🔠 Exercise 3 – Punctuation Correction
Students rewrite unpunctuated sentences using capital letters, commas, apostrophes, and quotation marks correctly.
🧠 Exercise 4 – Line-by-Line Editing
Students identify and correct one error per line in a paragraph involving tense, article usage, and subject-verb agreement.
📖 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Rewrite
Students rewrite an entire paragraph with multiple grammatical, spelling, and verb form errors corrected.
✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)
Exercise 1 – Editing
1. decide → decided
2. packes → packed
3. was looked → looked
4. start → started
5. doesn’t → didn’t
6. whet → wet
7. cryed → cried
8. falled → fell
Exercise 2 – Omitted Words (Determiners)
1. a
2. the
3. any
4. an
5. The
6. some
7. the
8. The
Exercise 3 – Punctuation Rewrite
1. When I looked outside, the sky was dark and it was raining.
2. She said, “I will be late. Don’t wait for me.”
3. My sister’s book, the one with the blue cover, is missing.
4. He bought pens, pencils, erasers, and notebooks.
5. I can’t believe it’s already November.
6. “No!” he shouted. “I will not quit.”
Exercise 4 – Editing Paragraph
1. see → saw
2. greet → greeted
3. since → for
4. he → him
5. few → some
6. follows → follow
7. was a many → were many
8. a right → the right
9. thanks → thanked
10. adviced → advised
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Rewrite (Sample Version)
Yesterday, I woke up late and rushed to the bus stop without eating my breakfast. I forgot my bag at home, so I couldn’t do my classwork. When I reached school, my friend told me that the teacher had already checked the homework. I felt very bad because I had spent a lot of time preparing it. During lunch, we were talking about the upcoming trip and everyone was very excited. After school, I went home and explained everything to my mother, who scolded me but also made me a sandwich.
Help your child master grammar correction, sentence clarity, and proofreading with these real-world editing challenges!
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Frequently Asked Questions
Editing and omission exercises test grammar, punctuation, spelling, and word usage. For example, students may correct subject-verb agreement issues or spot missing articles or prepositions in a sentence.
Encourage slow, line-by-line reading. Ask them to underline errors, read the sentence aloud, and think: "Does this sound correct?" Practice with 5–6 lines daily using short texts from newspapers or these worksheets.
Omission errors often involve missing helping verbs, articles, or prepositions. Example: "She going school" is incorrect — the missing word is "is." Teach students to read for completeness and sense.