fill the blanks with determiners given in the bracket.
i) How _____ money do you need? (much, many)
ii) _________ of the people here are conservative. (most, neither)
iii)He ate _______ food that was there in the kitchen. (a little, the little)
iv)She is introvert in nature, she must have _______ friends. (few, a few)
v)Do you think ______ people will come? (many, much)
vi)Get me _______ box from the table. (this, that)
vii)There were 2 pictures on the wall. I didn't like _______ of them. (some, any)
viii) I invited Ram and Shyam to the party but _______ of them come. (neither, none)
ix) You can share my lunch and I will share _______ . (your, yours)
Answers
Answered by
6
Heya!
________✒__________
i) Much
ii) Most
iii) the little
iv) a few
v) much
vi) that
vii) any
viii) Neither
ix) your's
Hope it helps :)✌
________✒__________
i) Much
ii) Most
iii) the little
iv) a few
v) much
vi) that
vii) any
viii) Neither
ix) your's
Hope it helps :)✌
sahilatmahi07:
now please ans it
Answered by
2
Answer:
The correct answers are:
How much money do you need?
Most of the people here are conservative.
He ate the little food that was there in the kitchen.
She is introvert in nature, she must have few friends.
Do you think many people will come?
Get me that box from the table.
There were 2 pictures on the wall. I didn't like any of them.
I invited Ram and Shyam to the party but none of them come.
You can share my lunch and I will share yours .
Explanation:
- With uncountable nouns, use "much." When using singular nouns, we often.
- With countable nouns, use "many." When using plural nouns, we use many.
- The distinction between "little" and "a little" is simply that the former has a pejorative connotation and the latter a positive one. When the word "little" is used, it refers to a tiny amount or practically any.
- When countable nouns are plural, the quantifier few is used. Few indicates a little quantity of anything when used without the article "a." The emphasis is lost when the article is added; few means some.
- Any can also be used to indicate "one or several" in affirmative phrases.
- When a noun is not present, we use the pronoun none. Nouns that are countable or uncountable are replaced with none.
- An adjective with the meaning "related to or belonging to you" is "your." A pronoun with the meaning "something which belongs to you" is yours.
#SPJ2
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