This Kindergarten worksheet introduces little learners to the world of opposites (antonyms) in a joyful and interactive way. Children explore everyday pairs like big–small, hot–cold, happy–sad, and bright–dark using fun grammar-building activities. It is designed to strengthen vocabulary, early comprehension, and sentence sense for young readers.
Opposites help children:
1. Build word meaning by comparing differences.
2. Expand vocabulary naturally through contrast.
3. Understand sentence context more clearly.
4. Express themselves with accuracy in speaking and writing.
This worksheet includes five fun-filled activities designed to practice opposites:
🧠 Exercise 1 – True or False
Children read simple sentences and mark if they are correct, e.g., “An elephant is big, but a mouse is small.”
✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Learners complete sentences with missing opposite words, e.g., “The dog is big, but the puppy is _______.”
📋 Exercise 3 – Choose the Correct Option
Students pick the correct opposite word from three choices, strengthening recognition skills.
📝 Exercise 4 – Underline the Correct Word
Children underline the correct opposite word inside brackets, e.g., “The lion is (big/small).”
🔗 Exercise 5 – Match the Following
Students match words with their opposite pairs, e.g., hot–cold, clean–dirty, long–short.
Exercise 1 – True or False
1. True
2. False
3. True
4. False
5. True
6. True
7. True
8. True
9. False
10. True
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. small
2. cold
3. short
4. dirty
5. slow
6. dry
7. sad
8. stale
9. soft
10. short
Exercise 3 – Choose the Correct Option
1. Small
2. Tall
3. Stale
4. Clean
5. Slow
6. Cold
7. Happy
8. Short
9. Dark
10. Down
11. Soft
Exercise 4 – Underline the Correct Word
1. big
2. slow
3. dirty
4. dark
5. fast
6. cold
7. soft
8. happy
9. hard
10. fresh
Exercise 5 – Match the Following
Big → Small
Fast → Slow
Hot → Cold
Happy → Sad
Hard → Soft
Clean → Dirty
Up → Down
Fresh → Stale
Long → Short
Bright → Dark
Make grammar fun at home with this opposites worksheet for Class KG. Start early and watch your child’s vocabulary grow with every activity!
A set of words that show completely different meanings, like hot–cold or big–small.
Opposite pairs build strong vocabulary and help children compare everyday objects.
By using visuals, they make it easy for kids to connect word meanings and contrasts.