Thursday, 29 October 2020

Happy Halloween to everyone!!!



What do you know about Halloween???

Do you dare to get to know more about this celebration?
If yes, Watch  this presentation!


Do you dare to  live a Halloween experience in Britain?

If yes, Watch this video...



Answer the questions about the video


And now time for a....

                                  Halloween Worksheet




Monday, 19 October 2020

Quantifiers

 

 


Expressions of quantity tell us how many or how much of something there is.




We use a little and much only with non-countable nouns like money, snow, pollution etc.

We use a few and many only with countable nouns like people, cars, books etc.

Let’s take a look at some expressions of quantity that are used with both countable and non-countable nouns:

Countable and Non-countable Expressions of Quantity
Any
Countable: There aren’t any cookies left. (negative) / Are there any cookies left? (question)
Non-countable: There isn’t any water in the cup. (negative) / Is there any water in the cup? (question)

No
Countable: There are no dogs in the park.
Non-countable: There is no money in my wallet.
Some
Countable: Some children study here in the mornings. (affirmative)
Non-countable: There is some noise coming from that house. (affirmative)
More
Countable: There are more students in this school than in that other one.
Non-countable: There is more crime in poor countries than in rich countries.
A lot of / lots of
Countable: She has a lot of / lots of pets.
Non-countable: There’s a lot of / lots of traffic in my city.
Plenty of
Countable: There are plenty of cars on the street.
Non-countable: There is plenty of food in the fridge.
Most
Countable: She keeps most of her books in her backpack.
Non-countable: We spent the most time on the renovations.
All
Countable: Who ate all the oranges?
Non-countable: Jessica is the one with all the experience.
Enough
Countable: There aren’t enough cookies for everyone, we need to buy some more.
Non-countable: There is enough space for both of us.



Click on the exercises below to practice quantity expressions:


             First English
                                    Agenda Web
                                                                 Quiz