A little, a few, very little, very few
The expressions a little and a few mean some or enough.
The expressions (very) little and (very) few mean hardly any or not enough.
A little, a few, (very) little and (very) few are quantifiers
Study the following examples:
| Examples | Meaning | 
|---|---|
| I've got a little money. I'm going to the cinema. | some/enough | 
| I've got a few friends. We meet everyday. | |
| I've got (very) little money. I need to borrow some. | hardly any / not enough | 
| I've got (very) few friends. I need to make new friends. | 
The rules:
Affirmative sentences:
A little, a few, (very) little and (very) few are generally used in affirmative statements, not negatives or questions.Countable and uncountable nouns:
- A little and (very) little are used with uncountable nouns (money, bread, water...)
- A few and (very) few are used with countable nouns (friends, tables, teachers..)
Meaning:
- A little and a few mean: some or enough.
 Example:
 "I have got a little money" = I have got some money. It's enough for me to do what I want.
 "I have got a few friends" = I have got some or enough friends. We meet every day.
- (Very) little and (very) few mean; hardly any or not enough.
 Examples:I have got (very) little money = I have got hardly any. I haven't got enough. I'll borrow some from my friend. 
 I have got (very) few friends = I have got hardly any. I haven't got enough. I need to make new friends.
 
http://www.myenglishpages.com/site_php_files/grammar-exercise-little-few.php
 
No comments:
Post a Comment