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Grammar

Much, Many, Little, Few, A Lot, Plenty

Choosing the right quantifier for countable and uncountable nouns

Which Quantifier Goes with Which Noun?

The first thing to know: much and little go with uncountable nouns, while many and few go with plural countable nouns.

QuantifierNoun typeExamples
much / littleuncountablemuch time, much money, little experience, little information
many / fewplural countablemany clients, many meetings, few options, few complaints
a lot of / lots of / plenty ofbotha lot of work, a lot of tasks, plenty of budget, plenty of ideas

A lot of, lots of, and plenty of work with any noun type. That makes them the safe default when you’re unsure.

Plenty of means more than enough:

  • Don’t rush the presentation. We have plenty of time before the meeting starts.
  • There’s plenty of space in the new office for the whole team.

Much in Positive Sentences — Avoid It

In everyday English, much sounds unnatural in positive statements. Use a lot of instead.

UnnaturalNatural
We spent much time on compliance.We spent a lot of time on compliance.
She earns much money.She earns a lot of money.

Much is fine in negatives and questions:

  • We didn’t spend much time on that proposal.
  • Does the project require much oversight?

And much works in positive sentences after too, so, or as:

  • We’ve spent too much money on software licenses this quarter.
  • There was so much paperwork that I stayed late.

Many has no such restriction. It works everywhere:

  • We have many offices across Europe. (positive — perfectly natural)
  • We don’t have many openings right now. (negative)
  • How many candidates did you interview? (question)

One note: with time words like years, weeks, and days, use many rather than a lot of:

  • She worked there for many years. (not a lot of years)

Little vs. A Little / Few vs. A Few

This is where many learners trip up. The word a completely changes the meaning.

Without “a” — negative meaning

Little means “not much” and few means “not many.” Both suggest the amount is less than you want or need.

  • We have little margin for error on this project. (= almost no margin — that’s a problem)
  • He made few sales last month. (= not many sales — a disappointing result)

You can add very for emphasis: very little, very few.

  • There was very little interest in the new product line.
  • The branch has very few customers on weekdays.

With “a” — positive meaning

A little means “some, a small amount” and a few means “some, a small number.” The amount is small but sufficient or noteworthy.

  • We still have a little budget left for the holiday party. (= some budget — enough to work with)
  • I’ve made a few contacts at the conference. (= some contacts — that’s good)

Side-by-Side Comparison

SentenceMeaning
He has little experience with public speaking.Not much experience. He’ll probably struggle.
He has a little experience with public speaking.Some experience. He can manage.
The team has few ideas for the campaign.Not many ideas. That’s a concern.
The team has a few ideas for the campaign.Some ideas. Enough to get started.

Only a little / Only a few

After only, always use a little or a few (not only little or only few):

  • We only have a little time before the deadline.
  • There are only a few tickets left for the company event.

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

We didn't receive _____ feedback on the proposal.

Select your answer:

Question 2

The department has _____ budget left, so we can't approve new expenses.

Select your answer:

Question 3

She's been with the company for _____ years now.

Select your answer:

Question 4

I've picked up _____ useful phrases in Japanese, enough to get by on business trips.

Select your answer:

Question 5

Our office has _____ equipment. We need to request new laptops and monitors.

Select your answer:

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