English, asked by xyz200, 1 year ago

he spent _ money he had (little , a little ,the little )


kushi40: a little

Answers

Answered by mehena4
37
He spent the little money he had.
Answered by aroranishant799
3

Answer:

He spent the little money he had.

Explanation:

With uncountable nouns, the quantifiers little and a little are employed. The fundamental distinction between little and a little is that little denotes a little amount, whereas a little denotes a small amount.

Few vs. a few follows the same pattern as little and a little. The sole distinction is that with countable nouns, we use few and a few in the plural form, whereas with uncountable nouns, we use little and a little. "Almost nothing" or "not much" is what "little" signifies.

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