Grammar (Intermediate)
Build on Grade 1 grammar with new concepts — pronouns, articles, prepositions, tenses, and punctuation!
📖 Take Your Grammar to the Next Level!
In Grade 1, you learned about nouns, verbs, adjectives, and singular & plural. Now in Grade 2, it’s time to learn even more amazing grammar!
You’ll learn about pronouns (he, she, it), articles (a, an, the), prepositions (on, under, beside), verb tenses (past vs present), punctuation (? and !), and pointing words (this, that, these, those)!
Each topic has reading practice, fill-in-the-blanks, word sort games, and sentence reading — plus 3 parent tips to help at home!
💡 Why This Matters
These grammar rules will help you write better sentences, ask questions, and tell stories about what happened in the past. They’re used in every book and conversation!
📊 What You’ll Master
Quiz Questions
8 questions per topic across 6 grammar concepts
Interactive Exercises
Fill-in-the-blank, word sort, reading practice on every page
Memory Tricks
One clever trick per topic to remember rules forever
Parent Tips
3 practical at-home tips per topic for daily practice
📚 6 Grammar Topics
Tap any topic to start learning!
Pronouns
I, You, He, She, It, We, They
Short words that take the place of a noun!
Articles
A, An, The
Tiny words that come before nouns!
Prepositions
Position Words
Words that tell WHERE something is!
Verb Tenses
Past vs Present
When did the action happen — now or before?
Punctuation
Question Marks & Exclamation Marks
Special signs that change the meaning of sentences!
This, That, These, Those
Pointing Words
Words that point to people or things — near or far!
🧠 Tips for Parents — Grade 2 Grammar
Replace Names with Pronouns
While telling stories, naturally replace names with pronouns. “Rahul went to school. He met his friend.” Show how pronouns make speech smoother.
Play Position Games
Hide an object and ask “Where is the toy?” Use answers like “It is UNDER the table” or “It is BEHIND the chair” to teach prepositions.
Practice Past vs Present
Ask what they did yesterday (past tense) and what they’re doing now (present tense). Daily conversation = daily grammar.
Spot Punctuation in Books
While reading together, point out ? and ! marks. Ask “Why is there a ? here?” Builds punctuation awareness.
One Topic at a Time
Spend 3-4 days per topic. Master one before moving to the next. Repetition beats rushing!
Ready to Start? Begin with Pronouns! 👥
Learn the small words that take the place of nouns!