Word Formation - Beginner Level: anagram solving BEGINNER

Master word formation concepts through this speed drill practice set. Worksheet 6 of 30 contains 20 beginner-level problems. Deep dive into anagram solving while learning word construction, anagram solving, dictionary words. Recommended for entry-level learners aiming for foundational concepts and basic patterns.

📝 Worksheet 6 of 30 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Beginner level

What you'll learn in this worksheet:
Your progress through Word Formation
Worksheet 6 of 30 (20% complete)

Question 1

Using the letters B, R, A, K, E, form a valid English word (use each letter at most once).
From B, R, A, K, E, we can form 'BRAKE' by using each letter exactly once. Strategy: Look for common vowel-consonant patterns.

Question 2

From the letter grid below, find a valid word by moving to adjacent cells (horizontal, vertical, or diagonal): G R E A T E P E N
In the grid, 'GREAT' can be formed by tracing adjacent cells. Strategy: Start from each letter and explore all possible paths to form valid words.

Question 3

Unscramble the letters 'TMEAEPRER' to form a meaningful word commonly used in competitive exams.
Breaking down TMEAEPRER: With 9 letters, we need to identify common letter patterns. The word 'TEMPERARE' uses all letters exactly once. Strategy: Look for common prefixes (in-, re-, pre-) and suffixes (-tion, -ate, -ing).

Question 4

Unscramble the letters 'RAPOITMNT' to form a meaningful word commonly used in competitive exams.
Breaking down RAPOITMNT: With 9 letters, we need to identify common letter patterns. The word 'IMPORTANT' uses all letters exactly once. Strategy: Look for common prefixes (in-, re-, pre-) and suffixes (-tion, -ate, -ing).

Question 5

Unscramble the letters 'TMEAEPRER' to form a meaningful word commonly used in competitive exams.
Breaking down TMEAEPRER: With 9 letters, we need to identify common letter patterns. The word 'TEMPERARE' uses all letters exactly once. Strategy: Look for common prefixes (in-, re-, pre-) and suffixes (-tion, -ate, -ing).

Question 6

Which of the following words CANNOT be formed from the letters of the word 'HAPPINESS'?
The word 'HAPPY' cannot be formed from 'HAPPINESS' because: HAPPY requires two 'P's and a 'Y', but 'HAPPINESS' has no 'Y' The other words ['SHAPE', 'PAINS', 'SPINE'] can all be formed using available letters.

Question 7

By adding the suffix 'ABLE' to 'manage', which valid English word is formed?
The suffix 'ABLE' combines with 'manage' to form 'manageable'. Note: Some spelling adjustments may occur at morpheme boundaries (e.g., dropping 'e' before 'able').

Question 8

Which meaningful word can be formed using only the letters from 'EDUCATION' (letters can be used at most as many times as they appear)?
From 'EDUCATION', we can form 'AUCTION'. Check: T(1) + N(1) + I(1) + U(1) + O(1) + A(1) + C(1) - all letters are available in sufficient quantity.

Question 9

Using the letters G, R, E, E, N, form a valid English word (use each letter at most once).
From G, R, E, E, N, we can form 'GREEN' by using each letter exactly once. Strategy: Look for common vowel-consonant patterns.

Question 10

Find a word that starts with 'I', ends with 'T', uses: M, P, O, R, T, A, N.
Given the constraints, 'IMPORTANT' satisfies all conditions: uses the specified letters, starts and ends with the required letters, and forms a valid English word.

Question 11

What word is formed by adding the prefix 'UN' to 'happy'?
Adding the prefix 'UN' to the root word 'happy' forms 'unhappy'. This follows standard English word formation rules.

Question 12

From the letter grid below, find a valid word by moving to adjacent cells (horizontal, vertical, or diagonal): C A T O R E D E N
In the grid, 'CORE' can be formed by tracing adjacent cells. Strategy: Start from each letter and explore all possible paths to form valid words.

Question 13

Which of the following words CANNOT be formed from the letters of the word 'HAPPINESS'?
The word 'HAPPY' cannot be formed from 'HAPPINESS' because: HAPPY requires two 'P's and a 'Y', but 'HAPPINESS' has no 'Y' The other words ['SHAPE', 'PAINS', 'SPINE'] can all be formed using available letters.

Question 14

If each letter in the word 'DOG' is shifted forward by 1 position(s) in the alphabet, what word is formed?
Each letter shifted forward by 1: D→E, O→P, G→H

Question 15

Complete the word chain: CAT → T... → E.... Which word fits in the middle?
In a word chain, each word must begin with the last letter of the previous word. Here: CAT ends with 'T', so the next word must start with 'T'. 'TABLE' starts with 'T' and ends with 'E', which begins the final word 'EGG'.

Question 16

What is the longest valid English word that can be formed using the letters: C, O, M, P, U, T, E, R (each letter used at most once)?
Analyzing C, O, M, P, U, T, E, R: The longest word is 'COMPUTER' with 8 letters. Strategy: Start with longer patterns, check for common words, then eliminate impossible combinations.

Question 17

If each letter in the word 'CAR' is shifted forward by 1 position(s) in the alphabet, what word is formed?
C→D, A→B, R→S

Question 18

If each letter in the word 'CLOUD' is shifted forward by 4 position(s) in the alphabet, what is the resulting word?
Forward 4: C→G, L→P, O→S, U→Y, D→H

Question 19

From the letter grid below, find a valid word by moving to adjacent cells (horizontal, vertical, or diagonal): B R A E A K D O G
In the grid, 'BREAK' can be formed by tracing adjacent cells. Strategy: Start from each letter and explore all possible paths to form valid words.

Question 20

Which word can be formed using letters from the word 'HORSE'?
From 'HORSE', we can extract the letters to form 'ROSE'. The letters R, O, S, E are all present in the original word.
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