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Sentence Formation Questions for Class 2 English Olympiad | Grade 2 IEO | Glovoy

Class 2 English 5 free questions · Updated March 2026

Sentence formation questions in Class 2 IEO test whether a child understands how words fit together to express a complete thought. Bronze questions ask the child to put four scrambled words into the correct Subject → Verb → Object order. Silver questions identify a correctly written sentence from four options — testing subject–verb agreement or distinguishing a complete sentence from a fragment. Gold questions require the child to combine two short sentences using the right joining word (conjunction) to preserve the correct logical relationship, or to identify which of four options contains both a full subject and a complete predicate.

Free Practice Questions

1
Bronze

Arrange these words to make a correct sentence: ball / kicked / Aarav / the

A Kicked Aarav the ball.
B Aarav kicked the ball.
C The ball Aarav kicked.
D Ball the Aarav kicked.
▶ Show Answer

Correct: B) Aarav kicked the ball.

A correct English sentence follows the order: Subject → Verb → Object. 'Aarav' is the subject, 'kicked' is the verb, and 'the ball' is the object. The correct sentence is 'Aarav kicked the ball.'

2
Silver

Which sentence is written correctly?

A Rohan and Aarav is going to the library.
B Is Rohan and Aarav going to the library.
C Rohan and Aarav are going to the library.
D Going to the library Rohan and Aarav.
▶ Show Answer

Correct: C) Rohan and Aarav are going to the library.

When the subject is plural ('Rohan and Aarav'), we use 'are', not 'is'. Option C has the correct subject–verb agreement and the correct word order for a statement.

3
Silver

Which of the following is a complete sentence?

A The bright red kite.
B Running very fast.
C Maya loves reading books.
D After school every day.
▶ Show Answer

Correct: C) Maya loves reading books.

A complete sentence must have a subject (who/what) and a verb (action or state). 'Maya loves reading books' has both — 'Maya' is the subject and 'loves' is the verb. The other options are fragments with no complete subject-verb pair.

4
Gold

Choose the best word to join these two sentences into one: 'Rohan studied hard. He passed the exam.'

A but
B so
C or
D although
▶ Show Answer

Correct: B) so

The second sentence is the result of the first, so we need a cause-and-effect joining word. 'So' shows that passing the exam happened because of studying hard: 'Rohan studied hard, so he passed the exam.' 'But' and 'although' show contrast, which is incorrect here.

5
Gold

Which sentence has both a clear subject AND a complete predicate?

A Jumped over the fence quickly.
B The small brown dog in the yard.
C Because it was raining outside.
D Aarav's sister plays the violin beautifully.
▶ Show Answer

Correct: D) Aarav's sister plays the violin beautifully.

A sentence needs a subject (who/what does the action) and a predicate (the verb and what follows it). Option D has 'Aarav's sister' as the subject and 'plays the violin beautifully' as the complete predicate. The other options are fragments — they each miss either a clear subject or a main verb.

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