Many
English vocabulary module: Many. Learn how to use 'many' to describe quantities of countable nouns, including examples and differences with 'much'.
Countable nouns
Countable nouns are nouns that have singular and plural forms and can be counted as individual units. In English, words like 'book', 'apple', and 'idea' are countable because you can say 'one apple' and 'two apples'. When you talk about a quantity of countable nouns, you use numbers or quantifiers such as 'many'. Plural countable nouns usually add -s or -es in spelling, although some have irregular plurals.
| Word/Phrase | Definition |
|---|---|
| A noun that can be counted as one book, two books, and so on. | |
| A noun that can be counted as one apple, two apples, and so on. | |
| A noun with an irregular plural: one child, two children. |
Meaning of many
'Many' means a large number of countable things. It is a quantifier that tells you there is a high quantity, but it does not specify an exact number. You use 'many' when you want to focus on the idea of numerous separate items. The noun it describes appears in the plural form.
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Many in statements
In statements, 'many' is used before a plural countable noun to describe a large quantity. It can appear with or without 'of' depending on the structure. 'Many of' is used when the noun has a determiner like 'the', 'these', or a possessive. Without 'of', 'many' goes directly before the plural noun.
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Many in questions and negatives
In questions and negative sentences, 'many' is especially common because English often prefers it in these contexts. Questions ask about the number of countable items, and negatives say that the number is not large. The noun remains plural, and 'many' shows that you are talking about countable units.
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Many vs much
'Many' is used with countable nouns, and 'much' is used with uncountable nouns. Uncountable nouns refer to things that are not typically counted as individual units, such as 'water' or 'information'. The choice between 'many' and 'much' depends on whether the noun is treated as countable or uncountable in English.
| Word/Phrase | Definition |
|---|---|
| A quantifier for a large number of countable nouns. | |
| A quantifier for a large amount of uncountable nouns. | |
| An uncountable noun that takes 'much', not 'many'. |