
Can you put a little lettuce in my sandwich? "A little" is correct because it refers to a small amount of an uncountable noun (lettuce) These earrings aren't my / mine. They may be Jenny's. "Mine" is correct as it's the possessive pronoun form of "my" There isn't much / many honey left. "Much" is correct because "honey" is an uncountable noun All of these paintings are nice, but the ones / one on the right is my favourite. "One" is correct because it refers to a single painting (singular) This organisation helps lots of / a lot people in need. "A lot" is the correct expression for "many" in this context I don't like these sandals. I'd like to try on the black ones / one over there. "Ones" is correct because it refers to multiple sandals (plural) I often hang out with a few / a little of my teammates after football practice. "A few" is correct when referring to countable nouns (teammates) These are my gloves, not Nancy's. Her / Hers are over there, on the table. "Hers" is the correct possessive pronoun form There aren't many / much recycling bins in our neighbourhood. "Many" is correct because "recycling bins" are countable nouns How many / How much orange juice do you drink every day? "How much" is correct because "orange juice" is an uncountable noun
Quiz by شاكر توفيق جرادات
Feel free to use or edit a copy
includes Teacher and Student dashboards
Measure skillsfrom any curriculum
Measure skills
from any curriculum
Tag the questions with any skills you have. Your dashboard will track each student's mastery of each skill.
With a free account, teachers can
- edit the questions
- save a copy for later
- start a class game
- automatically assign follow-up activities based on students’ scores
- assign as homework
- share a link with colleagues
- print as a bubble sheet
10 questions
Show answers
- Q1Can you put a little lettuce in my sandwich? What is the reason "a little" is the correct choice here?Because it is a formal way of saying "a few"Because it refers to a small amount of an uncountable noun (lettuce)Because it refers to a large amount of a countable nounBecause it indicates quantity without specifying if it is countable30s
- Q2In the sentence "These earrings aren't my _____. They may be Jenny's.", which word is correct?HersMineHerMy30s
- Q3Which word correctly completes the sentence: "There isn't ____ honey left."lots ofa fewmanymuch30s
- Q4In the sentence "All of these paintings are nice, but the ____ on the right is my favourite.", what is the correct word to use?onesonefewmany30s
- Q5Which phrase correctly completes the sentence: "This organisation helps ____ people in need."a lotlots ofmuchfew30s
- Q6Which word correctly fills in the blank in the sentence: "I don't like these sandals. I'd like to try on the black ____ over there."onesanotherfewone30s
- Q7In the sentence "I often hang out with ____ of my teammates after football practice.", which phrase is correct?mucha littlea fewmany30s
- Q8Which word correctly completes the sentence: "These are my gloves, not Nancy's. ____ are over there, on the table."MineHersTheirHer30s
- Q9Which word correctly fills in the blank in the sentence: "There aren't ____ recycling bins in our neighbourhood."manymucha littlefew30s
- Q10Which phrase correctly completes the question: "How ____ orange juice do you drink every day?"lots ofmuchmanya few30s