The document discusses different quantity expressions in English used with countable and uncountable nouns. It provides examples of expressions like "a lot of", "some", "many", "a few", and "much" used with countable nouns like "students" and "books", as well as uncountable nouns like "sugar" and "butter". It also shows how questions are formed using these expressions, such as "How many students?" versus "How much sugar?".
The document discusses different quantity expressions in English used with countable and uncountable nouns. It provides examples of expressions like "a lot of", "some", "many", "a few", and "much" used with countable nouns like "students" and "books", as well as uncountable nouns like "sugar" and "butter". It also shows how questions are formed using these expressions, such as "How many students?" versus "How much sugar?".
The document discusses different quantity expressions in English used with countable and uncountable nouns. It provides examples of expressions like "a lot of", "some", "many", "a few", and "much" used with countable nouns like "students" and "books", as well as uncountable nouns like "sugar" and "butter". It also shows how questions are formed using these expressions, such as "How many students?" versus "How much sugar?".
The document discusses different quantity expressions in English used with countable and uncountable nouns. It provides examples of expressions like "a lot of", "some", "many", "a few", and "much" used with countable nouns like "students" and "books", as well as uncountable nouns like "sugar" and "butter". It also shows how questions are formed using these expressions, such as "How many students?" versus "How much sugar?".