Quantifiers -- Important Notes to
remember
1. Add
“of” to the quantifier when there is a determiner
before the noun—determiners are:
A, an,
the; this, that, these, those; my, his, her, your, their, our.
I ate some of the
cookies.
He ate all of my cookies.
I ate a few of those cookies.
Many of the cookies were eaten. Much of
the cake was eaten.
Also add “of” to the quantifier with an object pronoun (after the verb)
Him, her, us,
them, me, it
Did you eat all of the cake? No, I only ate some of it.
2. Differences
between ‘a few’ and ‘few’ (for countable nouns) and ‘a little’ and ‘little’(for uncountable nouns)
A few, few:
I have a few copies. (some)
I have few copies. (not very many—lack of copies)
A little,
little:
I have a little money. (some)
I have little money. (not very much—lack of money)
3. Quite (adverb) and quantifiers
When ‘quite’ is before a small quantifier, it changes
the meaning to the opposite!!! (a few, a bit)
However; it
does not change the meaning with a large quantifier.
There are a few people at party. (not
many, a small number of)
There are quite a few people. (a lot, many)—opposite idea
There is a bit of food left. (a little food left, not much food)
There is quite a bit of food left. (a lot of food—much food)—opposite idea
Quite does
not change the meaning of quantifiers for large amounts—it stresses or
emphasizes that there is a large amount—similar
to using ‘very’.
There are
quite a lot of students at the party.
(There are very many students at the party.)
Carlos Slim
has quite a lot of money. (He has very
much money.)
4. ‘So’
and ‘too’ with quantifiers.
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