Quantifiers Final Test
A1-B2 Level
This final test covers every quantifier type from the module:
countable and uncountable noun identification, some/any in positive, negative,
and question contexts, much/many/a lot of for large quantities,
a few/a little and few/little for small positive and negative amounts,
too much/too many and enough for excess and sufficiency,
less/fewer for comparisons, and partitives for counting uncountable
nouns. Questions progress from A1 basics to B2 level challenges.
Success on this test requires two skills working together: identifying whether the noun is countable or uncountable, and reading the context to choose the right quantifier for the meaning. A negative sentence with a countable noun might need "any," "many," "few," or "enough" — context determines which. Look for clues in the surrounding words: complaints and problems suggest "too much/many" or "not enough," satisfaction suggests "a few/a little" or "enough," and formal comparisons suggest "fewer" or "less." This comprehensive assessment mirrors the range of quantifier questions found across Cambridge A2 Key, B1 Preliminary, and B2 First examinations.
Success on this test requires two skills working together: identifying whether the noun is countable or uncountable, and reading the context to choose the right quantifier for the meaning. A negative sentence with a countable noun might need "any," "many," "few," or "enough" — context determines which. Look for clues in the surrounding words: complaints and problems suggest "too much/many" or "not enough," satisfaction suggests "a few/a little" or "enough," and formal comparisons suggest "fewer" or "less." This comprehensive assessment mirrors the range of quantifier questions found across Cambridge A2 Key, B1 Preliminary, and B2 First examinations.
Quick Rule
identify noun type (countable/uncountable) → match quantifier to sentence type (positive/negative/question) → check context for meaning
- 1.We don't have enough flour to bake the cake. (uncountable, insufficiency, negative)
- 2.Fewer tourists visited the museum after the price increase. (countable, comparison)
- 3.Could I have some water, please? (offer/request exception — some in question)
- 4.She has very little patience with people who arrive late. (uncountable, negative emphasis)
- 5.There are too many errors in this report to accept it. (countable, excess)
Continue Practising
Continue practising with these related exercises
Much/Many Practice
EasyPractise using much with uncountable and many with countable nouns
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Some/Any Basics
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A Few / A Little
EasyUnderstand the positive meaning of a few and a little
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-ed vs -ing Adjectives
EasyPractise bored/boring, interested/interesting, and other feeling adjective pairs
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Conditionals
MediumMaster all types of conditional sentences (zero to third)
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Present Perfect
MediumLearn to talk about experiences and unfinished time
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