Grade 4 Quizzes, Questions & Answers
Recent Grade 4 Quizzes
This quiz assesses understanding of quantifiers in English grammar, focusing on the usage of 'much', 'little', 'few', and 'many'. It tests the ability to correctly apply these quantifiers in various contexts, enhancing...
Questions: 16 | Attempts: 6337 | Last updated: Mar 21, 2025
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Sample QuestionHe is broke. He spends too ___________ money.
Do you understand imagery and its types? If you know what imagery is, take this imagery quiz to test your knowledge. Here, you need to decide what sense the bold words appeal to. We have got a few imagery examples for...
Questions: 10 | Attempts: 12991 | Last updated: Aug 18, 2025
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Sample Question“There is a place where the sidewalk ends and before the street begins, and there the grass grows soft and white.”
This Year 4 science quiz focuses on identifying major parts of the human brain, such as the cerebrum, hypothalamus, and brain stem. It assesses students' knowledge of brain anatomy and its functions, enhancing their understanding...
Questions: 10 | Attempts: 281 | Last updated: Mar 20, 2025
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Sample Question* Match the major part of your brain that allows you to do the following: Control you body's temperature.
Today we will be talking about Roly Poly Bugs. Have you seen these before?
Questions: 5 | Attempts: 109 | Last updated: Oct 12, 2025
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Sample QuestionRoly-Poly Pill Bugs By Cynthia Sherwood Some people are afraid of bugs such as spiders or beetles. But there is one bug that just about everybody likes—pill bugs. If you ever pick one up, you know why its nickname is “roly-poly.” A pill bug rolls up into a tight little ball to protect itself. This bug is scared of you, not the other way around! These little gray or brown bugs can be found almost everywhere in the United States except the desert. That is because they need to stay moist. But they can live in dry places like California thanks to lawn sprinklers. One of their favorite hang-outs is under damp flower pots. Did you know that pill bugs have something in common with kangaroos? After her eggs hatch, the mother pill bug carries her young in a pouch under her belly. The little pill bugs stay there until they are big enough to be on their own. Pill bugs also have something in common with snakes. Just as snakes shed their skin when it gets too small, pill bugs do too. This is called “molting.” A pill bug molts about five times until it is full-grown. Pill bugs are a little like owls, too. Pill bugs are nocturnal, meaning they are most active at night. That is when they most like to wander around and look for food. And just like earthworms, pill bugs help break down plants in the soil. Pill bugs aren’t just nice bugs. They are also interesting ones! ----- Why are pill bugs nicknamed roly-poly?
This 4th grade Social Studies quiz covers key aspects of Colonial America, focusing on the Puritans in Massachusetts Bay, economic motivations in the Connecticut River valley, and governance in the New England Colonies. It...
Questions: 13 | Attempts: 172 | Last updated: Mar 21, 2025
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Sample QuestionWhat was the main reason that the Puritans started the Massachusetts Bay Colony?
Kuis Online MM Kelas 4 covers basic arithmetic operations and problem-solving skills suitable for 4th-grade students, focusing on addition, subtraction, multiplication, and understanding numerical places.
Questions: 10 | Attempts: 4312 | Last updated: Mar 22, 2025
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Sample Question322.145 ... 322.045. Tanda perbandingan yang tepat untuk mengisi titik-titik tersebut adalah ....
This Comma Use Quiz Practice assesses understanding of proper comma usage in various contexts. It tests skills in identifying necessary commas, correct placement, and comma use with adjectives, enhancing punctuation proficiency...
Questions: 13 | Attempts: 222 | Last updated: Mar 20, 2025
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Sample QuestionHow many items are in the sentence below? The surface of the dirty desk was covered with pens papers and erasers.
Narrative
Kevin was afraid to go to school. He knew that as soon as he walked through the school gate, someone would be waiting for him. They might grab his schoolbag and hide it, or open it up and scatter all the books in the...
Questions: 20 | Attempts: 159 | Last updated: Mar 19, 2025
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Sample Question* Why was Kevin afraid? (Choose the best option)
This quiz titled 'Comprehension - The Haunted House - Year 4\/5' tests students' understanding of a narrative sequence and details in a haunted house themed story. It assesses key reading comprehension skills, enhancing their...
Questions: 23 | Attempts: 157 | Last updated: Jun 7, 2025
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Sample QuestionTrue or False? The chart is meant to be read from right to left?
Explore the structure and function of human ears in 'Comprehension - Our Ears - Year 4\/5'. This quiz assesses understanding of how ears detect sound, balance functions, and compares human ears to those of other animals.
Questions: 16 | Attempts: 135 | Last updated: May 21, 2025
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Sample QuestionOur Ears Description Our ears allow us to hear sounds of all types: the voices of our family and friends, the music we like, the sounds of nature, the noises of the city. As well, our ears help us to keep our balance and warn us of danger. The part of our head that we call the ear is only the outer part of the organ of hearing. The ear has three parts. Sound passes through the outer ear to the middle ear, which picks up the vibrations of the sound and transfers it to the inner ear. Here they are changed into nerve signals that travel to the brain. The brain translates the nerve signals and tells us what sound we are hearing. We measure sound in decibels. The sound of this page turning might be about thirty (30) decibels. While the concert your big sister attended last night could have measured an ear-splitting one hundred (100) decibels! Our inner ear helps us to keep our balance. It has a number of semicircular canals that contain fluid, and this fluid moves when we move. Information about the fluid's movement is carried to the brain by nerves. The brain makes sense of this information and then sends messages to the muscles we need to keep our balance. Have you noticed that a cat can move its ears and point them towards a sound? This is because a cat must be constantly on-guard against danger and needs to know the direction from which a sound comes. Our ears don't move in the same way. Can you think why? It is because we don't need to protect ourselves in the same way. So, our ears can sit close to our heads and not move all around. True or False? Our ears pick up sound vibrations.
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