Punctuation – English Grammar Exercises for A2

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A2 » Punctuation – English Grammar Exercises for A2

Exercises:   123456789101112

Choose the correct option (a, b, or c) to complete the sentences. Pay close attention to punctuation to avoid run-on sentences or comma splices.

 “I have finished the ______ will send it to you now.”

     (a) report. I

     (b) report, I

     (c) report I

 “The files are ______ let me know if you need anything else.”

     (a) attached, please

     (b) attached. Please

     (c) attached Please

 “I completed the training ______ you for your help.”

     (a) module, thank

     (b) module thank

     (c) module. Thank

4   “The presentation is ______ saved it in the shared folder.”

     (a) ready I

     (b) ready. I

     (c) ready, I

 “I updated the client ______ can check it now.”

     (a) list. You

     (b) list, you

     (c) list you

 “I have fixed the error in the ______ will print it shortly.”

     (a) document, I

     (b) document I

     (c) document. I

 “The meeting minutes are attached to this ______ a great weekend.”

     (a) email, have

     (b) email. Have

     (c) email Have

 “I called the supplier this ______ will deliver the goods tomorrow.”

     (a) morning. They

     (b) morning, they

     (c) morning they

9   “The homework is ______ will hand it in tomorrow.”

     (a) complete, I

     (b) complete I

     (c) complete. I

10   “I received your ______ will make the changes right away.”

     (a) feedback I

     (b) feedback. I

     (c) feedback, I

11   “I sent the invoice to the ______ confirmed receipt.”

     (a) client. They

     (b) client, they

     (c) client they

12   “The data entry is ______ me know the next steps.”

     (a) done let

     (b) done, let

     (c) done. Let

13   “I have reviewed the ______ looks fine.”

     (a) contract. Everything

     (b) contract, everything

     (c) contract everything

14   “I checked the inventory ______ have enough stock for this week.”

     (a) levels, we

     (b) levels. We

     (c) levels we

15   “The project is finally ______ need to check it one more time.”

     (a) finished, however, I

     (b) finished however I

     (c) finished. However, I

16   “I prepared the slides for ______ printed the handouts.”

     (a) tomorrow. Also, I

     (b) tomorrow, also I

     (c) tomorrow also I

17   “I have done the tasks you asked ______ there anything else?”

     (a) for, is

     (b) for. Is

     (c) for Is

18   “The draft is ______ you want me to send it to the manager?”

     (a) complete, do

     (b) complete Do

     (c) complete. Do

19   “I fixed the bugs in the ______ system is working well now.”

     (a) code. The

     (b) code, the

     (c) code, The

20   “I will be on leave ______ have finished all my pending work today.”

     (a) tomorrow, I

     (b) tomorrow. I

     (c) tomorrow I

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 (a)

Explanation: “I have finished the report” and “I will send it to you now” are two independent clauses with their own subjects and verbs. A full stop (.) must be used to separate them. Option (b) is a comma splice (incorrectly using a comma to join two full sentences). Option (c) is a run-on sentence missing punctuation entirely.

2 (b)

Explanation: Similarly, a full stop is required to end the first statement, and the next word “Please” must be capitalized. (a) is a comma splice; (c) lacks a full stop.

3 (c)

Explanation: End the statement about the completed task with a full stop, followed by the new sentence “Thank you”. (a) is a comma splice error; (b) is a run-on.

4 (b)

Explanation: These are two separate ideas. You must use a full stop. (c) is a common comma splice mistake.

5 (a)

Explanation: The sentence “I updated the client list” is complete. The pronoun “You” must be capitalized after a full stop. (b) violates basic grammar rules by using a comma to connect two independent clauses.

6 (c)

Explanation: The correct option uses a full stop and capitalizes the pronoun “I”. The error in (a) is a comma splice, and (b) is a run-on sentence.

7 (b)

Explanation: “Have a great weekend” is an imperative sentence and must stand alone. Options (a) and (c) fail to separate the sentences correctly.

8 (a)

Explanation: “They will deliver…” introduces a new subject and verb. A full stop is mandatory. Option (b) is a very common comma splice error for A2 learners.

9 (c)

Explanation: Finishing the work and handing it in are structured here as two independent clauses. The full stop in (c) is correct.

10 (b)

Explanation: You need to break the sentence after “feedback”. Option (c) is incorrect because a comma cannot join two independent clauses.

11 (a)

Explanation: The pronoun “They” starts a new sentence. Using a full stop in (a) is the only grammatically accurate choice.

12 (c)

Explanation: “Let me know” is an independent imperative clause. Place a full stop after “done” and capitalize “Let”.

13 (a)

Explanation: Both clauses have their own subjects and verbs. (b) is a comma splice trap, and (c) is a run-on trap.

14 (b)

Explanation: Option (b) correctly separates the two distinct statements: “I checked…” and “We have…”. Option (a) misuses the comma.

15 (c)

Explanation: “However” is a conjunctive adverb. At the A2 level, it is safest and most correct to start a new sentence with it after a full stop, followed by a comma.

16 (a)

Explanation: Similar to Q15, “Also” is used to add information and typically starts a new sentence, followed by a comma.

17 (b)

Explanation: The question “Is there anything else?” must be completely separated from the preceding declarative sentence using a full stop.

18 (c)

Explanation: The question “Do you want me to…” starts a completely new thought. Option (c) correctly separates it with a full stop.

19 (a)

Explanation: A full stop separates the two independent clauses. Option (c) is a visual distractor; it uses a comma but capitalizes “The”, which is structurally inconsistent and incorrect.

20 (b)

Explanation: Two clear, separate actions: taking leave tomorrow and having finished the work today. They must be divided by a full stop.

GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  • The Full Stop (Period): It is mandatory to use a full stop (.) to end a complete sentence (one that contains a full Subject + Verb structure).
  • The “Comma Splice” Trap: Avoid using a comma (,) to join two independent clauses (e.g., I finished the report, I will send it to you -> INCORRECT). This is one of the most common errors in business email writing.
  • Capitalization: Always remember to use a capital letter for the first word immediately following a full stop.

Exercises:   123456789101112

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