990prep mascot 990prep
Grammar

All / Most / Some / Any / No / None

Using quantifiers like all, most, some, any, no, and none — with and without 'of'

Quantifiers Directly Before a Noun

Words like all, some, any, most, much, many, few, little, and no can go directly before a noun when you talk about things in general.

  • All employees must complete the safety training.
  • Some clients prefer to communicate by email.
  • Most meetings run longer than planned.
  • I have no objections to this proposal.

When you use these words directly before a noun, do not add of:

  • Some people left early. (not Some of people)
  • Most companies offer paid holidays. (not Most of companies)

Quantifiers + of + the / this / my / etc.

When you talk about a specific group (not things in general), use of + a determiner (the, this, these, my, your, etc.):

PatternExample
some of + the/my/these…Some of the applicants had no experience.
most of + the/my/these…We solved most of the issues before the deadline.
none of + the/my/these…None of this information is confidential.
any of + the/my/these…Have you reviewed any of these invoices?

You need both pieces: of + a determiner. You cannot say some of people or most of time. It must be some of the people or most of the time.

General vs. Specific: the Key Difference

General (no “of”)Specific (with “of + determiner”)
All reports should be accurate.All of the reports you sent had errors.
Most projects finish on time.Most of our projects this quarter finished late.

The first column talks about reports or projects in general. The second column points to a particular set.

“All” and “Half” — “of” Is Optional

With all and half, you can include or drop of before a determiner. Both forms are correct:

  • All my colleagues agreed. = All of my colleagues agreed.
  • Half the budget is gone. = Half of the budget is gone.

This shortcut only works with all and half. For other quantifiers, of is required before a determiner.

Quantifiers + of + it / us / you / them

Before pronouns (it, us, you, them), you must use of:

  • The report is 40 pages. I’ve only read half of it. (not half it)
  • All of us attended the training session. (not all us)
  • There were ten candidates, but none of them met the requirements.
  • Do any of you have questions?

Using Quantifiers Alone (Without a Noun)

When the noun is already clear from context, you can drop it and use the quantifier by itself:

  • Some offices have standing desks and some don’t. (some = some offices)
  • I checked the tickets. A few were still available, but most were sold out.
  • Half the budget is mine, and half is yours. (not the half)

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

_____ employees must wear an ID badge in the building.

Select your answer:

Question 2

I've visited _____ the branch offices, but I still haven't been to the one in Seoul.

Select your answer:

Question 3

We sent out 200 surveys. _____ were returned.

Select your answer:

Question 4

_____ this money belongs to the company. The rest is from private donors.

Select your answer:

Question 5

Have you read _____ these reports? I need feedback by Friday.

Select your answer:

Related Courses

990prep

Your fastest path to a higher TOEIC score. Practice with professionally crafted mock tests.

Company

TOEIC® is a registered trademark of Educational Testing Service (ETS).
This website is not affiliated with or endorsed by Educational Testing Service.

© 2026 990prep. All rights reserved.