11+ Spelling Practice
(GL Assessment)

Spelling makes up roughly 4 to 8 questions in a typical GL Assessment 11+ English paper, and sits inside the Technical English section (spelling, punctuation and grammar) that is worth around half of the whole paper. Those marks are some of the most winnable in the exam, because spelling rewards steady, systematic practice more than any other English skill.

GL almost never asks a child to spell a word from scratch. Instead it uses an error-spotting format: a sentence is split into four labelled sections (A, B, C and D), with a fifth option for "No mistake". Your child reads the whole sentence and decides which section contains the misspelled word, or chooses "No mistake" if every word is correct. The mistakes are always realistic ones children genuinely make, never random jumbles, so the skill is careful proof-reading rather than guesswork.

This is a very learnable format. Once a child knows the high-frequency tricky words and the common spelling patterns GL tests, they spot the errors quickly and confidently. Every question on this page follows that exact four-section structure with a worked explanation, so your child learns the rule behind each answer.

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What the GL 11+ Tests on Spelling

GL spelling questions cluster around a handful of patterns; GL does not publish exact weightings, so the order below is our research estimate from analysing practice papers and tutor materials, in rough order of frequency:

  • Homophones and near-homophones (their/there/they're, practice/practise, complement/compliment): an estimated 20%
  • Suffixes and word endings (-tion/-sion/-cian, -ible/-able, -ous, -ence/-ance): an estimated 20%
  • Silent or unstressed letters (Wednesday, February, parliament, government): an estimated 12%
  • Double letters (accommodate, recommend, necessary, embarrass): an estimated 12%
  • The ie/ei patterns (receive, believe, achieve, plus the "weird" exceptions): an estimated 8%
  • Prefixes (dis-, mis-, un-, in-, il-, ir-, im-): an estimated 8%
  • Commonly misspelled words (separate, definitely, occurrence): an estimated 8%
  • Plurals and verb forms (-ies/-eys, irregular plurals, dropping or keeping the e): an estimated 7%

Difficulty runs from high-frequency Year 3 to 4 words with an obvious error, up to less common Year 5 to 6 words where the wrong spelling is a genuine real-world slip and several correct words look tricky on purpose.

Sample Spelling Questions

Five questions drawn from PrepStep’s spelling bank, spanning Foundation to Challenging. Tap “Show worked explanation” to see the full method after you’ve had a go. The correct answer is highlighted on each question so you can check immediately.

Question 1 Foundation

Which section contains a spelling error?

AI could here Bthe birds singing Cfrom my bedroom Dwindow this morning.
  1. Section A
  2. Section B
  3. Section C
  4. Section D
  5. No mistake
Show worked explanation

'here' should be 'hear'. 'Here' means in this place; 'hear' means to listen. They are homophones. Look out for this one in the exam! ✓

Question 2 Foundation

Which section contains a spelling error?

AThe children walked Bpassed the old Cchurch on their Dway to the park.
  1. Section A
  2. Section B
  3. Section C
  4. Section D
  5. No mistake
Show worked explanation

'passed' should be 'past'. 'Past' is used with movement (walked past); 'passed' is the past tense of 'pass' (she passed the exam). Break it into chunks to spot the tricky bit. ✓

Question 3 Intermediate

Which section contains a spelling error?

AThe programme about Bendangered animals was Cso intresting that DI watched it twice.
  1. Section A
  2. Section B
  3. Section C
  4. Section D
  5. No mistake
Show worked explanation

'intresting' should be 'interesting'. Remember: interest + ing = interesting. The 'e' stays in the word. Try writing it both ways and see which looks right. ✓

Question 4 Intermediate

Which section contains a spelling error?

AThe children were Bnot aloud to Cplay outside during Dthe thunderstorm.
  1. Section A
  2. Section B
  3. Section C
  4. Section D
  5. No mistake
Show worked explanation

'aloud' should be 'allowed'. 'Aloud' means out loud (reading aloud); 'allowed' means permitted. You'll have an advantage if you remember this one! ✓

Question 5 Challenging

Which section contains a spelling error?

AIt is neccessary to Bbring your own Cequipment for the Doutdoor adventure day.
  1. Section A
  2. Section B
  3. Section C
  4. Section D
  5. No mistake
Show worked explanation

'neccessary' should be 'necessary'. Remember: one 'c' (one collar) and two 's's (two sleeves). You'll have an advantage if you remember this one! ✓

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Common mistake 1 of 4

Assuming there must always be an error.

Tip: Around 15 to 20% of GL spelling questions are correctly spelled, with "No mistake" as the right answer. Teach your child that "No mistake" is a real, common answer, so they check every section rather than forcing an error that is not there.

Common mistake 2 of 4

Only checking the longest or hardest-looking word.

Tip: GL often hides the error in an ordinary word and surrounds it with tricky but correct ones to create doubt. Encourage your child to proof-read all four sections word by word, not just the one that looks difficult.

Common mistake 3 of 4

Spelling by ear and dropping unstressed syllables.

Tip: Words like interesting, temperature and February are misspelled because the middle sound is swallowed in speech (intresting, Febuary). Get your child to sound out every syllable, especially the quiet middle ones.

Common mistake 4 of 4

Confusing homophones because the spelling sounds correct.

Tip: their/there/they're, practice/practise and complement/compliment all sound right but mean different things. Teach your child to check the meaning in the sentence, not just whether the word sounds like the one intended.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is spelling tested in the GL 11+ English exam?

GL uses an error-spotting format. A sentence is split into four sections (A to D), with a fifth option for "No mistake". Your child decides which section contains a misspelled word, or chooses "No mistake" if all the spellings are correct. It is multiple choice, marked on a separate answer sheet, and there is one misspelling per sentence at most.

What does "No mistake" mean in GL spelling questions?

It is the fifth option, used when every word in the sentence is spelled correctly. Roughly 15 to 20% of GL spelling questions have "No mistake" as the correct answer, and it appears more often in the harder questions. It exists to stop children assuming there is always an error to find, so it is worth practising deliberately.

Which words are most commonly tested in GL 11+ spelling?

GL leans on a well-known set of tricky Year 5 to 6 words, including accommodate, necessary, separate, definitely, embarrass, government, environment, immediately, occurrence, rhythm, mischievous, pronunciation and parliament. Homophones such as their/there/they're and practice/practise come up regularly too. Learning these high-frequency words gives the quickest gains.

How hard is spelling in the GL 11+ exam?

Difficulty ranges from common words with an obvious error, which a child who reads regularly spots instantly, up to less common words where just one letter is wrong and the misspelling is a genuine common slip. The hardest questions surround the error with correctly spelled but tricky-looking words to create doubt, and use "No mistake" more often.

How can my child practise spelling for the 11+?

Practise in the real GL error-spotting format rather than just writing out spelling lists, so your child gets used to proof-reading four sections and considering "No mistake". Focus first on the highest-frequency patterns: homophones, common word endings, and the well-known tricky words. Free PrepStep practice presents each question in the exact GL format with a worked explanation.

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PrepStep has 420 spelling questions in GL Assessment format: five options, instant feedback, and step-by-step explanations. Free to start.

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