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Countable, uncountable nouns and quantifiers
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Do 'a lot of' and 'lots of' mean the same thing?
Yes!
Is this correct? I eat much fruit
No, we usually say 'I eat a lot of fruit'
Is this correct? Lola eats a few vegetables
Yes! Vegetables are countable, therefore we use 'a few' not 'a little'
Is this correct? I don't eat none eggs
No! I don't eat ANY eggs
How many vegetables do you eat per day? _____ _ ___ (a medium quantity)
Quite a lot
Can we use 'a little' with uncountable or countable nouns?
Uncountable, e.g. A little coffee
How much sugar does a can of Coke have?
A lot (no 'of')
A can of Coke has _ ___ __ sugar (= much)
a lot of
How much or how many? ... sugar do you have?
How much
Complete the question: Would you like ... coffee?
Would you like SOME coffee? (We use 'some' in questions when it is a request or offer)
Complete the question: Do we have ... chocolate?
Do we have ANY chocolate?
Complete the sentence: We have ... eggs in the fridge
We have SOME eggs in the fridge
Complete the sentence: I don't have ... apple
I don't have AN apple
Which of these nouns are uncountable? money, wine, children, table
money and wine
Which of these nouns are countable? rice, water, egg, people, chair, air
egg, people, chair