

This Grade 8 Literature Skills worksheet helps students understand how authors use foreshadowing and suspense to keep readers engaged and curious. Through the exciting passage “The Dark Path,” learners explore how clues, atmosphere, and tension prepare readers for important events later in the story.
Why Foreshadowing & Suspense Matter in Grammar?
1. Foreshadowing helps students recognize clues about future events in stories.
2. Suspense keeps readers interested by creating tension and uncertainty.
3. Learners improve comprehension and prediction skills through literary analysis.
4. Understanding suspense techniques strengthens storytelling and creative writing abilities.
🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students answer MCQs about suspense, danger clues, foreshadowing, and the traveler’s experience in the forest.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Match the Following
Learners match clues like “broken branches,” “strange shadows,” and “sudden silence” with their meanings and story effects.
📋 Exercise 3 – True or False
Students identify whether statements related to suspense, danger hints, and foreshadowing are true or false.
📝 Exercise 4 – Sort the Words
Children sort words into “Foreshadowing” and “Suspense” categories to better understand literary clues and emotional tension.
📖 Exercise 5 – Short Answer Questions
Students explain how foreshadowing works in the story, why clues create suspense, and how earlier hints prepare readers for the ending.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. b) Through a forest
2. b) Strange sounds and shadows
3. b) Broken branches and silence
4. b) The traveler
5. a) Foreshadowing
6. b) The traveler met a wild animal.
7. a) To create suspense
8. a) Danger nearby
9. a) They prepare readers.
10. a) Suspense
Exercise 2 – Match the Following
1. Broken branches – Signs of nearby danger
2. Strange shadows – Unclear frightening shapes
3. Sudden silence – Builds tension and fear
4. Wild animal – Unexpected encounter
5. Forest at night – Dark and risky setting
6. Traveler – Main character in danger
7. Foreshadowing – Hints about future events
8. Danger hints – Warnings before danger
9. Suspense – Feeling of nervous excitement
10. Earlier clues – Hints about future events
Exercise 3 – True or False
1. True
2. False
3. False
4. True
5. True
6. True
7. True
8. False
9. True
10. True
Exercise 4 – Sort the Words
Foreshadowing – Broken branches, Danger hints, Clues in forest, Strange shadows, Sudden silence
Suspense – Fearful feeling, Nervous excitement, Worrying atmosphere, Feeling uneasy, Tense moment
Exercise 5 – Short Answer Questions
1. The author uses foreshadowing by including clues like strange sounds, broken branches, and sudden silence that hint something dangerous may happen later.
2. The clues create suspense because they make readers feel nervous and curious about what might happen next.
3. Earlier hints prepare readers for the ending by warning them about possible danger before the traveler encounters the wild animal.
Help your child strengthen literary analysis and prediction skills with engaging foreshadowing and suspense activities designed for Grade 8 readers.
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Foreshadowing gives hints or clues about events that may happen later in a story or reading passage.
Foreshadowing activities teach learners to predict outcomes and pay attention to important details in texts.
Stormy weather, warning statements, and suspicious actions are common foreshadowing clues used in English grammar worksheets.