Quantifiers Notes
Quantifiers Notes
‘Some’, ‘many’, ‘a lot of’ and ‘a few’ are examples of quantifiers. Quantifiers can
be used in affirmative sentences, questions, requests or commands with both
countable and uncountable nouns. e.g.
Some quantifiers can go only with countable nouns (e.g. friends, people, cups),
some can go only with uncountable nouns (e.g. sugar, tea, money, advice), while
some can be used with both countable and uncountable nouns.
I haven’t got much change; I’ve only got a hundred rupee note.
Are there many campsites near your place?
(b) We usually use much and many with interrogative sentences and negative
sentences.
We use each for two or more than two items and every for more than two items.
Both of these are followed by singular countable nouns and singular verbs, e.g.
We use each when the number in the group is limited or definite, but every is
used when the number is indefinite or unknown.
e.g.
(b) We usually use several with plural nouns, but it refers to a number which is
not very large, (i.e. less than most)
(c) All requires a plural verb when used with a countable noun, but requires a
singular verb with an uncountable noun, e.g.
(b) We use neither with only singular countable nouns and a singular verb.
Neither is the negative of either, e.g.