U8 - WEATHER VOCABULARY & GRAMMAR WORKSHEET

Grammar - English Language

🔗 Activity 1: Matching

🧩 Instructions: You need to match each weather word (like “hot” or “windy”) with the correct meaning from the right column.

🧠 How to Solve It:

•             Read the weather word on the left carefully. Think about what that kind of weather looks or feels like.

•             Then read through all the definitions (A–J) on the right side.

•             Choose the letter that best explains the meaning of the word.

•             Write that letter next to the number of the word.

📌 Tip: Think about real-life examples — like how it feels when it's foggy or snowy.

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📖 Activity 2: Reading Comprehension

📚 Instructions: Read the short story about the weather and then answer the questions.

🧠 How to Solve It:

•             Start by reading the passage slowly and carefully.

•             Underline or remember key weather words (e.g., “snowy,” “windy”).

•             Look at each question. Go back to the passage to find the part that answers it.

•             Answer using complete sentences or key words.

📌 Tip: Try reading each question before re-reading the passage so you know what to look for.

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✏️ Activity 3: Fill in the Blanks

🖊️ Instructions: Fill in each sentence with the correct weather vocabulary word.

🧠 How to Solve It:

•             Read the full sentence to understand the meaning.

•             Think about what word fits the best: Does it describe sun, rain, cold, fog, etc.?

•             Choose the most suitable weather word from the list you learned.

📌 Tip: Think about the clue in the sentence — like “wore sunglasses” might go with “sunny.”

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🧠 Activity 4: Multiple Choice

✅ Instructions: Choose the best answer from the options (A–D).

🧠 How to Solve It:

•             Read the question carefully.

•             Look at all the options before picking one.

•             Eliminate the ones that don’t make sense.

•             Pick the best-fitting and grammatically correct answer.

📌 Tip: Read the question and options aloud to check if they sound right.

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🔤 Activity 5: Sentence Ordering

🧩 Instructions: Rearrange the mixed-up words to form a correct sentence.

🧠 How to Solve It:

•             Look for clues like question words (what, was) or starting words (It, The).

•             Remember how sentences are usually ordered in English:

Subject → Verb → Details (e.g., “It was sunny yesterday.”)

•             Rearrange the words until it makes a complete sentence.

📌 Tip: Say the words out loud in different orders until it sounds right.

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🧑‍🏫 Final Tips:

•             Take your time — it’s okay to re-read or double-check your work.

•             Use your class vocabulary list or weather flashcards if you get stuck.

•             Ask yourself, “Does this make sense?” after every answer.

REVIEW

  • English Language
  • 5th grade

REVIEW

Grammar - English Language

COMPLETE

 

Aquí tienes una lista de ejercicios con need to / don’t need to y must / mustn’t, usando todos los pronombres. Incluyo solo ejercicios, y si quieres luego te doy las soluciones.

📝 Ejercicios con NEED TO / DON’T NEED TO

Completa las frases con need to o don’t need to + el verbo entre paréntesis.

  1. I __________ (buy) more bread. There’s plenty at home.

  2. You __________ (study) harder if you want to pass.

  3. He __________ (leave) now; he has time.

  4. She __________ (call) her doctor today; it’s important.

  5. It __________ (be) perfect, just acceptable.

  6. We __________ (take) an umbrella; it’s sunny.

  7. They __________ (finish) the project this week; the deadline is next month.

  8. You (plural) __________ (check) the timetable before travelling.

📝 Ejercicios con MUST / MUSTN’T

Completa con must o mustn’t y el verbo adecuado.

  1. I __________ (forget) my keys again.

  2. You __________ (touch) that cable; it’s dangerous.

  3. He __________ (wear) a tie at this restaurant.

  4. She __________ (be) late for the meeting.

  5. It __________ (make) noise after midnight.

  6. We __________ (clean) the room before leaving.

  7. They __________ (bring) food; it’s forbidden.

  8. You (plural) __________ (help) if you want; it’s not compulsory.

📝 Mezcla: NEED TO / DON’T NEED TO / MUST / MUSTN’T

Elige la opción correcta en cada frase.

  1. I (need to / mustn’t) tell you something important.

  2. You (don’t need to / must) pay now; you can pay later.

  3. He (must / don’t need to) smoke here. It’s prohibited.

  4. She (must / need to) finish this today; it's urgent.

  5. We (don’t need to / mustn’t) make noise in the library.

  6. They (must / don’t need to) take the exam again if they passed.

  7. You (mustn’t / need to) forget to send the email.

  8. It (must / don’t need to) be perfect, just acceptable.

Si quieres, te preparo también las soluciones, más ejercicios, o versiones tipo test. ¿Qué prefieres, Sara? 💬

fiction

Reading Comprehension - English Language

Fiction “It seems to me that almost everything is a waste of time,” Milo remarks as he walks dejectedly home from school. Until for no logical or predictable reason he is transported to a strange world of words, numbers and confusion. ‘Isn’t it beautiful?’ gasped Milo. ‘Oh, I don’t know,’ answered a strange voice. ‘It all depends on how you look at things.’ ‘I beg your pardon?’ said Milo, for he didn’t see who had spoken. ‘I said it depends how you look at things,’ repeated the voice. Milo turned around and found himself staring at two very neatly polished brown shoes, for standing directly in front of him (if you can use the word ‘standing’ for someone suspended in mid-air) was another boy just about his age, whose feet were easily three feet off the ground. ‘For instance,’ continued the boy, ‘if you happen to like deserts, you might not think this was beautiful at all.’ ‘For instance,’ said the boy again, ‘if Christmas trees were people and people were Christmas trees, we’d all be chopped down, put up in the living room, and covered with tinsel, while the trees opened our presents.’ ‘What does that have to do with it?’ asked Milo. 83 Year 6, Sequence 11 ‘Nothing at all,’ he answered, ‘but it’s an interesting possibility, don’t you think?’ ‘How do you manage to stand up there?’ for this was the subject that most interested him. ‘I was about to ask you a similar question,’ answered the boy, ‘for you must be much older than you look to be standing on the ground.’ ‘What do you mean?’ Milo asked. ‘Well,’ said the boy, ‘in my family everyone is born in the air, with his head at exactly the height it’s going to be when he’s an adult, and then we all grow towards the ground. When we’re fully grown up, or as you can see, grown down, our feet finally touch. Of course, there are a few of us whose feet never reach the ground, no matter how old we get, but I suppose it is the same in every family.’ He hopped a few steps in the air, skipped back to where he started, and then began again. ‘You certainly must be very old to have reached the ground already.’ ‘Oh no,’ said Milo seriously, ‘in my family we all start on the ground and grow up, and we never know how far until we actually get there.’ ‘What a silly system,’ the boy laughed. ‘Then your head keeps changing its height and you always see things in a different way? Why, when you’re fifteen things won’t look at all the way they did when you were ten, and at twenty everything will change again.’ ‘I suppose so,’ said Milo, for he had never really thought about the matter. ‘We always see things from the same angle,’ the boy continued. ‘It’s much less trouble that way. Besides it makes more sense to grow down and not up. When you’re very young, you can never hurt yourself from falling down if you’re in mid-air, and you certainly can’t get into trouble for scuffing your shoes or marking the floor if there’s nothing to scuff them on and the floor is three feet away

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