

This Grade 7 literature worksheet helps students master the powerful connection between imagery (language that appeals to the five senses) and the emotional mood a reader experiences. Through engaging activities like multiple-choice questions, fill-in-the-blanks, true/false statements, sentence analysis, and paragraph writing, learners discover how sensory details like "the crunch of leaves underfoot," "the bitter cold stung my cheeks," and "the sweet scent of jasmine" can create specific moods—gloomy, cheerful, creepy, cozy, tense, or joyful. By learning to identify how writers use sight, sound, smell, touch, and taste to make readers feel like they are inside the story, students become deeper, more perceptive readers prepared for advanced literary analysis in middle school and beyond.
For Grade 7 learners, understanding how imagery creates mood unlocks the emotional power of storytelling. This topic is important because:
1. Imagery appeals to the five senses (sight, sound, smell, touch, taste) to make writing come alive.
2. Different sensory details create different moods—dark clouds and cold wind create a gloomy mood; bright sunshine and birds singing create a cheerful mood.
3. Effective imagery helps readers feel like they are inside the story, not just reading about it.
4. Understanding mood helps readers appreciate the author's craft and emotional intentions.
This worksheet includes five carefully designed activities that build a lasting understanding of how imagery creates mood:
🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students select the correct answer from three options, covering core concepts such as how imagery uses sensory details to create mood, which sensory details create which moods, and how imagery appeals to sight, sound, smell, touch, and taste.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Students complete key sentences using their understanding of core concepts, such as "Another word for mood is atmosphere" and "Imagery appeals to the five physical senses."
✅ Exercise 3 – True and False
Students evaluate 10 statements to identify common misconceptions (e.g., "Imagery only appeals to the sense of sight" is false) and reinforce correct knowledge about how sensory details create different moods.
📖 Exercise 4 – Identify the Sense & Mood
Students read 10 sentences, each containing vivid imagery. For each, students identify which sense the imagery appeals to (sight, sound, smell, touch, or taste) and describe the mood the imagery creates.
📝 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing (Fill in the Blanks)
Students complete a guided paragraph about mood creation through imagery using a word bank (atmosphere, reader, musty, scared, sea, joyful, feel, feel, craft, ignore). This reinforces vocabulary and demonstrates how writers choose sensory details to create specific emotional experiences.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. a) mood
2. a) gloomy
3. c) cheerful
4. b) taste
5. a) sound
6. b) touch
7. a) creepy
8. c) tense
9. b) cozy
10. a) feel
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. atmosphere
2. touch
3. mood
4. Imagery
5. sight
6. sound
7. smell
8. physical
9. mysterious / gloomy / creepy
10. taste
Exercise 3 – True and False
1. False 2. True 3. True 4. False 5. True
6. False 7. True 8. True 9. False 10. True
Exercise 4 – Identify the Sense & Mood
The crisp apple exploded with sweet juice on my tongue.
Sensory Detail: "The crisp apple exploded with sweet juice on my tongue" (Underlined)
Sense: Taste
Ravi's fingers touched the cold, slimy surface of the frog.
Sensory Detail: "cold, slimy surface" (Underlined)
Sense: Touch
Kunal felt the rough bark of the old banyan tree.
Sensory Detail: "rough bark" (Underlined)
Sense: Touch
Priya saw the lightning split the dark sky in two.
Sensory Detail: "the lightning split the dark sky in two" (Underlined)
Sense: Sight
The aroma of spicy curry filled the entire kitchen.
Sensory Detail: "The aroma of spicy curry" (Underlined)
Sense: Smell
Riya heard the distant wail of a train whistle at midnight.
Sensory Detail: "the distant wail of a train whistle" (Underlined)
Sense: Sound
Raj tasted the bitter medicine and immediately made a sour face.
Sensory Detail: "the bitter medicine" (Underlined)
Sense: Taste
Asha heard the gentle patter of rain on the tin roof.
Sensory Detail: "the gentle patter of rain" (Underlined)
Sense: Sound
Meera watched the crimson sunset bleed across the horizon.
Sensory Detail: "the crimson sunset" (Underlined)
Sense: Sight
The sweet scent of jasmine drifted through the open window.
Sensory Detail: "the sweet scent of jasmine" (Underlined)
Sense: Smell
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing (Fill in the Blanks)
Imagery is language that appeals to the five senses. Writers use imagery to create a specific mood or atmosphere. Mood is the feeling the reader experiences. For example, imagine a dark, damp basement. The air smells musty and old. Your skin feels cold and sticky. You hear dripping water and squeaking rats. This imagery creates a scared or fearful mood. Now imagine a sunny beach. You see bright blue water. You smell salty sea. You feel warm sand between your toes. This imagery creates a calm or joyful mood. Writers choose sensory details carefully. They want you to feel like you are in the story. When you read, notice how imagery makes you feel. That feeling is the mood. Understanding mood helps you appreciate the author's craft.
Help your child step inside any story and feel every moment—unlocking the power of sensory language with a Free 1:1 Literature Skills Trial Class at PlanetSpark.
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Mood is the emotional feeling a reader gets from a story (e.g., suspenseful, joyful, eerie). Imagery — vivid descriptions using the five senses — builds that mood through word pictures.
“Warm sunlight and soft laughter” creates happy mood; “cold, dripping walls and distant howls” creates fear.Worksheets use such contrasts to teach mood shifts.
It teaches students to choose specific sensory details (e.g., “stale air” vs. “fresh breeze”) to control how readers feel, a core skill for CBSE English creative writing.