StartFew, a few, little, a little Quiz > Preview: We have_____eggs, not enough for the party, so we need to buy more. a. few. b. a few. c. little. d. a little traducirlittle: pequeño, pequeño, sin importancia, poco, pequeño/ña [masculine-feminine, singular], muy poco/ca. Más información en el diccionario inglés-español. Features Language. 1) people swim in the sea in the winter. a) few b) a few c) little d) a little 2) I can't wait for you. I've got time. a) few b) a few c) little d) a little 3) There is ________ bread in the cupboard. It's enough for dinner. a) few b) a few c) little d) a little 4) It's winter, but we still have Quantifiers_answerwith NOT ANY/ A LITTLE/ A FEW/ NOT MUCH / NOT MANY/ SOME/ A LOT OF/ LOTS OF Losowe karty. autor: Liliantomiya. English. Quantifiers: MUCH x MANY x A LOT OF x FEW x LITTLE Test. autor: E4cmarianatavar. A few /few; a little/little Test. autor: Mauraidesl. thefew rounds left in their magazines, the few guests who escaped the fire; There's a big difference between few and a few, however. They're directed quantifiers, and they point in opposite directions. a few means 'a small, but still positive, number', while; few is a negative quantifier, and means 'fewer than expected, predicted, or wished' PerfectEnglish Grammar. Review 'a few', 'few', 'little' and 'a little' here. Download this quiz in PDF here. This exercise comes from my book: A and The Explained . Afew, a little, a lot of Pravda nebo lež. podle 2stupen. 6. třída angličtina. a lot/ a few/ a little Kvíz. podle Cooperkarolina. angličtina. A little/a few, a/an/some Chybějící slovo. podle Lenikilian. 5C Mock test 1: Few, a few, little, a little, much, many, a lot of Kvíz. many a few , very few, few. much, a little, very little, little. a lot of, lots of. a lot of. many. much. 6. Choose the correct words. 1- There are a few / a little active volcanoes in the world. 2- We have little / few knowledge about other galaxies. 136 views • 5 slides Fewfor countable; little for uncountable. We use (a) few before plural (countable) nouns and (a) little or a bit of (more informal) before uncountable nouns in affirmative, negative and interrogative sentences. I have to do a few things this afternoon. He always gets good results with very little effort. Rule Less is the comparative form of little. It is used especially before uncountable nouns. Fewer is the comparative of few. It is used before plural nouns. For example: Jeff drinks less alcohol than John. I have fewer pairs of shoes than I used to have. nzDZ.