In positive sentences, we use a lot of/lots of with countable or uncountable nouns to talk about a big quantity of something.
- He eats a lot of apples.
- I drink lots of milk.
We use quite a lot of to talk about a medium quantity.
-
I eat quite a lot of apples.I eat quite lots of apples.
- I drink quite a lot of milk.
In negative sentences, we use many with countable nouns, and much with uncountable nouns.
- We don't have many books. (= We have a small number.)
- I don't have much money. (= I have a small amount.)
We can also use a lot of/lots of in negative sentences with countable or uncountable nouns.
- We don't eat lots of potatoes.
- I don't have a lot of time.
We use How much/How many to ask about quantities of things or people.
We use How many with countable nouns.
- How many books has she got?
- How many cars are there?
We use How much with uncountable nouns.
- How much money do you need?
- How much cheese do you eat?
We can answer with a short answer.
- ‘How many shops are there?’ ‘A few./Quite a lot./ A lot.’
- ‘How much homework do you have?’ ‘A little./None.’
Or we can answer with a full sentence, using a quantifier + noun.
- ‘How many shops are there?’ ‘There are quite a lot of shops.’
- ‘How much money have you got?’ ‘I haven't got any money.’
Lots of and a lot of mean the same, but lots of is more informal.
We use None in a short answer, but we use not any in a full sentence.
- ‘How much meat do you eat?’ ‘None./I don't eat any meat.’
We often use no in sentences with there is/there are.
- ‘How much money is there?’ ‘None./There's no money.’