Countable and Uncountable Nouns: Some, Any, Much, Many
English nouns are either countable or uncountable. This affects which quantifiers we use.
1. Countable Nouns
Can be counted: one apple, two apples. Used with a/an, some, any, many, few. Many students, a few books.
2. Uncountable Nouns
Cannot be counted: water, rice, milk, bread, information. Used with some, any, much, little. Much water, a little milk.
3. Some and Any
- Some: affirmative sentences and offers: I need some water. Would you like some tea?
- Any: negative and questions: I don’t have any money. Do you have any questions?
4. Much and Many
- Much: with uncountable nouns (usually negative/questions): How much sugar? Not much time.
- Many: with countable nouns: How many students? Many people.
5. Exercises
Complete: How _____ (much/many) milk? I don’t have _____ (some/any) books.
Similar lessons:
📍 دروس مشابهة
- اللغة الإنجليزية — Present Simple: Formation, Usage and Exercises — 1st Year M
- اللغة الإنجليزية — Present Continuous: Formation, Usage and Exercises — 1st Ye
- اللغة الإنجليزية — Simple Past: Regular and Irregular Verbs — 2nd Year Middle
- اللغة الإنجليزية — Future with Will and Going To — 2nd Year Middle School — A
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