

This Grade 6 worksheet provides targeted practice in identifying and correctly using both homophones and homonyms in sentence-based exercises. Students work with homophone pairs like flour/flower, knight/night, fare/fair, sail/sale, and sea/see, as well as homonym words like bank (river bank/financial bank), bat (cricket bat/animal), bark (tree bark/dog bark), ring (jewellery/sound), and match (game/matchstick). Through five carefully designed activities — matching, sorting, fill in the blanks, multiple choice questions, and sentence rewriting — learners develop the ability to differentiate between these tricky word types using contextual clues. The exercises are structured to move from simple identification to application, ensuring that students not only recognise the words but can also use them confidently in their own writing. This worksheet is ideal for building a strong grammar foundation for Grade 6 students and preparing them for advanced language tasks.
Homophones and homonyms are among the most frequently tested word concepts in school-level English assessments. For Grade 6 learners, practising these is important because:
1. They help students develop sharper contextual reading skills by relying on meaning rather than just sound or spelling.
2. Both word types appear extensively in reading comprehension passages, creative writing prompts, and grammar exercises.
3. Misusing a homophone or homonym can lead to embarrassing errors and miscommunication in formal writing.
4. Mastering these concepts boosts confidence in vocabulary usage and prepares students for competitive exams.
This worksheet includes five grammar-rich activities that build fluency with homophones and homonyms:
Exercise 1 – Match the Word Partners
Students match each word on the left to its correct homophone or homonym partner on the right. For example, "flour" matches with "flower" (homophone), "knight" matches with "night" (homophone), "bat" matches with "bat" (homonym — animal and cricket bat), and "bark" matches with "bark" (homonym — tree covering and dog sound). This strengthens recognition of both word types.
Exercise 2 – Sort the Word Pairs
Students sort word pairs into two categories: Homophone Pairs and Homonym Pairs. Pairs like right/write, night/knight, sea/see, and peace/piece go under Homophone Pairs, while pairs like bat/bat, bark/bark, ring/ring, and park/park go under Homonym Pairs. This builds sorting and categorisation skills.
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
Students pick the correct word from each pair to complete contextual sentences. For example: "Anjali paid the bus ___ (fair/fare) at the Pune station." The correct answer is "fare." This exercise strengthens the ability to choose the right word based on sentence meaning.
Exercise 4 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students choose the correct word from four given options. For example: "The dog ________ at night. a) bags b) banks c) backs d) barks." The correct answer is "barks." This reinforces quick and accurate word identification.
Exercise 5 – Rewrite the Sentences
Students rewrite each sentence by correcting the wrongly used homophone or homonym. For example: "Anjali paid the fair for the auto ride today." becomes "Anjali paid the fare for the auto ride today." This builds proofreading, editing, and contextual vocabulary skills.
Exercise 1 – Match the Word Partners
1. bank → bank (homonym)
2. flour → flower
3. knight → night
4. bat → bat (homonym)
5. bark → bark (homonym)
6. sole → soul
7. plain → plane
8. ring → ring (homonym)
9. fair → fare
10. match → match (homonym)
Exercise 2 – Sort the Word Pairs
Homophone Pairs: right/write, fare/fair, night/knight, sea/see, peace/piece, heal/heel, weak/week, sail/sale, bored/board
Homonym Pairs: bat/bat, ring/ring, bark/bark, park/park, light/light, nail/nail
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
1. fare
2. bank
3. plane
4. bark
5. storey
6. knight
7. bark
8. plane
9. fair
10. pair
Exercise 4 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. d) barks
2. a) bark
3. c) sent
4. c) scent
5. b) sun
6. a) son
7. b) piece
8. d) peace
9. b) sea
10. a) see
Exercise 5 – Rewritten Sentences
1. Anjali paid the fare for the auto ride today.
2. Rahul heard the bark of the dog at night.
3. Diya saw a plane flying high above the clouds.
4. Pooja found peace and quiet in her room.
5. Arjun swung his bat to hit the cricket ball.
6. Neha sat on the bank of the Yamuna river.
7. Kartik lit the diya using a match from the drawer.
8. Aarav tied a knot in the yellow kite thread.
9. Rohan stood under the palm tree near his school.
10. The sound of the night was loud with cricket sounds.
Give your child the confidence to use homophones and homonyms accurately in everyday writing with a Free 1:1 Grammar Mastery Trial Class at PlanetSpark. Our engaging sessions help students master tricky words through contextual practice and expert guidance.
Book a free trial!
Homophones sound the same but have different meanings and spellings, while homonyms have the same spelling but different meanings.
Because both involve words with multiple meanings or spellings, students may mix them up.
Worksheets provide exercises where students identify and categorize words as either homophones or homonyms.