Grammar chart – much, many, a lot of, a little, a few, no, any, none

 

Much/many

Many for countable, much for uncountable in (?) (-)

We use much/many in negative sentences and questions. We use many before plural countable nouns and much before uncountable nouns. We don’t normally use them in affirmative sentences.

How much/how many

We use how many + plural nouns and how much + uncountable nouns to ask about quantity. You can review countable and uncountable nouns here.

We can also say How much is it? to ask about the price of an item.

 

A lot (of)

Before both countable and uncountable

We use a lot of before both plural countable and uncountable nouns to talk about big quantity. We normally use a lot of in positive sentences.

We can say quite a lot of to talk about medium quantity.

It is also possible to use a lot of in negative sentences and questions.

Of before noun; of at the end of sentence

We must always use a lot of including of before a noun. However, we can use a lot (without of) at the end of a sentence or in short answers.

 

A few/a little

A few for countable; a little for uncountable

We use a few before plural countable nouns and a little before uncountable nouns in affirmative, negative and interrogative sentences to talk about small quantity.

Not many, not much

We can also use not many + plural countable or not muchuncountable nouns. The meaning is similar.

No/not…any/none

When we want to talk about zero quantity, we can use no + noun or not…any + noun. The meaning is the same.

In short answers we use none.