Learn about quantifiers like all, some, enough and less and do the exercises to practise using them.
Learn quantifiers in English with clear definitions, rules, and examples. Understand how to use much, many, few, little, enough, and more correctly.
Quantifiers are words that show quantity in English. Learn their types and how to use them with countable and uncountable nouns.
Quantifiers are words that tell us the amount or quantity of something in a sentence. They help answer questions like “How much?” or “How many?” by giving information about the number or extent of a particular noun.
We use quantifiers before a noun, an article or a determiner to talk about quantity and amount. Common quantifiers include some/any, much/many, (a) few/ (a) little, lots of/a lot of and enough.
Master English quantifiers with our complete grammar guide. Learn the rules for countable and uncountable nouns, including much vs. many, few vs. little, and more to improve your fluency today.
We use quantifiers to answer the questions how much or how many, without using a number. For example: some, many, a few, a lot of, lots of, a bit of, several, no, any. In this post we’ll introduce you to the basics of how to use quantifiers in English.
There are several quantifiers in English and they can be a little tricky to use. So here’s a description of each quantifier with examples to help improve your understanding of them.
Quantifiers are words like ALL, EVERY, MOST, MUCH, SOME, ANY. They are determiners that describe quantity in a noun phrase. They answer the question 'How many?' or 'How much?' on a scale from none (0%) to all (100%)...