

Is your Grade 4 child ready to sound like a true academic? This power-packed worksheet on Synonyms for Academic Words helps students discover smarter, more precise alternatives to the academic verbs they use every day — building a vocabulary that works equally well in English class, science projects, and beyond.
Designed for Class 4 learners, this worksheet focuses on ten essential academic words: analyze, evaluate, demonstrate, conclude, predict, summarize, illustrate, justify, identify, and synthesize. Students explore their synonyms — probe, judge, show, finish, recap, foresee, depict, prove, name, and combine — through five carefully crafted activity types that move from simple recognition to real sentence-level application.
Building a strong bank of academic synonyms is a key vocabulary skill for Grade 4 learners, and here is why:
1. They help students replace repetitive words and express ideas with greater precision and variety.
2. They improve reading comprehension by helping students decode academic texts across all subjects.
3. They build confidence in writing tasks such as essays, summaries, and project reports.
4. They prepare students for the kind of analytical language expected in higher grades and competitive exams.
This worksheet includes five well-structured activities that build academic synonym skills from recognition to application:
Exercise 1 – Match the Following
Students match each academic word on the left (analyze, demonstrate, evaluate, conclude, summarize, predict, illustrate, identify, justify, synthesize) to its correct synonym on the right (probe, show, judge, finish, recap, foresee, depict, name, prove, combine). This foundational activity builds clear word-meaning connections in a visual, structured format.
Exercise 2 – Sort the Words
Students sort fifteen word pairs into Synonym and Not-Synonym columns. Pairs include conclude/finish, Fast/Quick, Old/Ancient, predict/foresee, Near/Close, boy/girl, Hot/Cold, identify/name, justify/prove, Strong/Weak, jump/run, sing/dance, table/chair, happy/sad, and Happy/Joyful. This activity sharpens the ability to distinguish genuine synonym pairs from unrelated or opposite word combinations.
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
Students choose the correct academic synonym from a given pair to complete ten meaningful sentences — such as selecting ""judge"" to fairly assess a student project, or ""foresee"" to predict which team might win. This tests both vocabulary knowledge and contextual understanding simultaneously.
Exercise 4 – Multiple Choice Questions
Ten multiple-choice questions ask students to identify the correct academic word based on sentence context or word meaning — using answer choices drawn from a wider range of vocabulary to ensure deeper thinking and genuine understanding rather than guessing.
Exercise 5 – Sentence Rewriting
Students rewrite ten sentences by replacing an incorrect or vague word with the right academic synonym. For example, ""She completed the chart instead of examining the data"" is rewritten using the word analyze/probe. This is the most challenging and rewarding activity, requiring students to think critically about meaning, context, and word choice.
Exercise 1 – Match the Following
analyze → probe
demonstrate → show
evaluate → judge
conclude → finish
summarize → recap
predict → foresee
illustrate → depict
identify → name
justify → prove
synthesize → combine
Exercise 2 – Sort the Words
Synonym
conclude/finish
Fast/Quick
Old/Ancient
predict/foresee
Near/Close
identify/name
justify/prove
Happy/Joyful
Not Synonym
boy/girl
Hot/Cold
Strong/Weak
jump/run
sing/dance
table/chair
happy/sad
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
1. judge
2. show
3. examine
4. finish
5. recap
6. foresee
7. depict
8. name
9. prove
10. combine
Exercise 4 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. d) inspect
2. c) show
3. d) prove
4. a) appraise
5. b) recap
6. a) anticipate
7. c) depict
8. b) name
9. d) prove
10. b) mix
Exercise 5 – Sentence Rewriting (Sample Correct Answers)
1. She analyzed/probed the data instead of completing the chart.
2. He demonstrated the topic rather than just describing it.
3. We evaluated each student and gave appropriate grades.
4. They concluded the argument instead of ignoring it.
5. He summarized the passage rather than expanding it.
6. She remembered to predict/foresee the next step in the process.
7. They depicted the cycle in a diagram instead of describing it in words.
8. He identified/named the bones correctly rather than guessing.
9. She justified/proved why she was right instead of apologising.
10. They synthesized/combined their notes instead of splitting them apart.
Help your Grade 4 child build the academic vocabulary they need to write, think, and communicate like a scholar — join a Live 1:1 English class at PlanetSpark today!
Synonyms help students expand their academic vocabulary, making their writing clearer and more precise.
Using synonyms avoids repetition and makes writing sound more sophisticated and varied.
"Important can be replaced by ""crucial"" or ""significant,"" enriching academic writing."