

This Grade 5 worksheet is designed to strengthen students' understanding of ellipses in dialogue. It features a variety of exercises, including multiple-choice questions, true or false statements, sentence rewriting, and paragraph completion. Through these activities, students learn how to use ellipses to indicate hesitation, unfinished thoughts, pauses, and omitted text in direct speech.
Ellipses are placed where the speaker hesitates or trails off. They are often used before a quote ends or in the middle of a sentence to indicate an unfinished thought.
Ellipses help convey meaning beyond simple dialogue. For Grade 5 learners, this topic is important because:
1. Ellipses show pauses and hesitation, which adds emotional depth to the conversation.
2. They help readers understand unfinished thoughts or trailing off in dialogue.
3. Ellipses add realism to speech, making it sound more natural, as if the speaker is unsure or reflective.
4. They help clarify when something is intentionally omitted from speech or writing.
This worksheet includes five grammar-rich activities that build fluency with ellipses in dialogue:
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students choose the sentence that uses ellipses correctly in dialogue, practicing different dialogue scenarios.
Exercise 2 – True or False
Identifying correct and incorrect statements about ellipses.
Exercise 3 – Adding Ellipses
Inserting ellipses to show pauses or hesitation in given sentences.
Exercise 4 – Sentence Rewriting
Rewriting sentences with the appropriate punctuation for dialogue.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Completion
Completing a short passage by inserting ellipses and other necessary punctuation to complete the dialogue correctly.
It improves students' ability to identify and use ellipses in speech and reinforces understanding of punctuation in dialogues, encouraging flexibility and awareness in how punctuation shapes meaning.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. b) “Well… I am not sure,” she said.
2. a) “Maybe… I will visit,” Arjun said.
3. c) “I think… we can start,” Kavya said.
4. b) “Wait… I will check,” the vendor said.
5. a) “No… I cannot come,” Dev said.
6. c) “Yes… I understand,” the guide said.
7. a) “It’s just that… I’m tired,” Aarav explained.
8. c) “Please... keep quiet,” the librarian said.
9. c) “I... will try again,” the athlete said.
10. b) “Maybe… tomorrow,” the farmer said.
Exercise 2 – True or False
1. True
2. False
3. True
4. False
5. False
6. True
7. True
8. False
9. True
10. False
Exercise 3 – Adding Ellipses
1. I think... I know the way.
2. I will... call you later.
3. Let us see... what happens.
4. I thought... maybe tomorrow would be better.
5. I am not sure... I can make it.
6. I... forgot my keys again.
7. I... am not sure.
8. Someone is... following us.
9. I... don’t remember the answer.
10. Maybe... we should try again.
Exercise 4 – Sentence Rewriting
1. He said, "Wait... don’t move."
2. Meera said, "Oh... I lost my pen."
3. The coach said, "Team... run quickly."
4. The artist said, "Maybe... add more shades."
5. "I... don’t know," he muttered.
6. The tutor said, "Please... read carefully children."
7. "Please... don’t leave yet," she pleaded.
8. "I’ll... be there eventually," he promised.
9. "Wait... did you hear that?" he whispered.
10. "I think... I know the way," she said.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Completion
1. Maya whispered, "I think... we should open it."
2. Sara hesitated and said, "I am not sure... what is inside."
3. Maya reached for the lock and muttered, "Here goes... nothing."
4. "It is so beautiful," Tara gasped.
5. "Maybe... we should stop," Dev warned, but no one listened.
6. "I can see something moving...," she said as her voice trailed off.
7. "Wait... did you hear that?" Maya asked.
8. "I thought... I heard a voice...," Sara whispered.
9. "The glow faded," she sighed. "It is... gone."
10. "We should have been... more careful," Mark replied.
11. "I guess... that is that," he added.
12. "Is anyone there...?" Tara called out.
Help your child master ellipsis and dialogue practice today with a Free 1:1 Communication Skills Trial Class at PlanetSpark.
Ellipses indicate that something has been omitted or that a speaker has trailed off.
Use three dots with a space before and after in dialogue to show a pause or omission.
Students may overuse ellipses or place them incorrectly when trying to show uncertainty in dialogue.