This document discusses using quantifiers such as "a lot of", "many", "much", "a few", and "a little" correctly when describing amounts. It provides examples of incorrect usage, such as "there is many soda" and "I think you have to buy much yogurt", and suggests the student correct the mistakes by replacing the quantifiers with the proper ones for countable or uncountable nouns.
This document discusses using quantifiers such as "a lot of", "many", "much", "a few", and "a little" correctly when describing amounts. It provides examples of incorrect usage, such as "there is many soda" and "I think you have to buy much yogurt", and suggests the student correct the mistakes by replacing the quantifiers with the proper ones for countable or uncountable nouns.
This document discusses using quantifiers such as "a lot of", "many", "much", "a few", and "a little" correctly when describing amounts. It provides examples of incorrect usage, such as "there is many soda" and "I think you have to buy much yogurt", and suggests the student correct the mistakes by replacing the quantifiers with the proper ones for countable or uncountable nouns.
but there aren’t much crackers in your house. - We don’t need a Little bananas for fruit salad. I think you have to buy much yogurt. - Do you buy a lot of bread? No, I don’t. Because I have much crackers.