• Do you know how to use a few, few, very little and a bit of? Test what you know with interactive exercises and read the explanation to help you.
  • PODCAST-ENGLISH-A-FEW-LITTLE. ... But there’s a big difference in meaning when we use the indefinite article a with strong>few and little.
  • She needs little help shopping this weekend. The boys played little baseball because they had to go home for dinner. few or a few little or a little.
  • The difference between FEW, A FEW, LITTLE and A LITTLE in English. (These are known grammatically as quantifiers).
  • We´ve got a lettuce and a few tomatoes Few people in my street recycle their rubbish I normally have a little wine with my lunch I have little time for rude people.
  • When little and few are used with an article – a little or a few– both words mean ‘some’ and have a positive meaning.
  • Here it means "a few people": → A level which had ... been reached only by a few. But you can't say "a fewer" or "a fewest" — at least not in modern English.
  • Choose much, many, a lot of, a little, a few, etc. to complete the sentences
    • 5 Dad, I need many a little a few money for school.
    • 6 There are any a few a little things that you can do to improve your writing.
  • few, a few, little, a little, quiz for 11th grade students. Find other quizzes for English and more on Quizizz for free!
  • The term ‘few’ is used to express plural countable nouns in a negative quantity, i.e., almost nothing, whereas ‘a few’ means positive quantity, i.e., something.