Few vs Little in EnglishA2
Learn when to use few and little with countable and uncountable nouns. Practice clear sentences with both.
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Prerequisites
Why few and little confuse
Few and little both talk about a small amount, so they are easy to mix up. The difference is in the noun that follows. Few goes with plural countable nouns such as books, friends, and ideas. Little goes with uncountable nouns such as sugar, money, and work. Both words can sound negative because they suggest that the amount is small enough to be a problem. A learner who knows Quantitative Adjectives already knows that quantity words depend on the noun. These two follow the same idea.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use few with plural countable nouns when you mean a small number. | ||
| Use little with uncountable nouns when you mean a small amount. | ||
| Both words can sound negative when they suggest not enough. |
Which rule correctly matches the word to the noun type?
Few with countable nouns
Use few before plural countable nouns: few students, few cars, few chances. The noun must be plural because few describes more than one thing, but not many. In a sentence like Few people came, the speaker usually means the number was too small. That feeling of lack is common in statements about attendance, money, support, or options. Compare it with many in Much vs Many: many points to a large number, while few points to a small number. With few, the speaker often shows disappointment or concern.
| Usage | Explanation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small number | Use few when you want to show that there are not many people or things and the noun is plural and countable. | ||
| Low availability | Use few when something exists, but the amount is still too small for what you need. | ||
| Lack of chance | Use few to talk about limited chances, results, or opportunities. |
The gallery was almost empty, and the announcement still had not attracted many visitors.
few (few / little / a few / a little) visitors wandered in after lunch.
Little with uncountable nouns
Use little before uncountable nouns: little water, little time, little information, little help. These nouns do not have a plural form in this meaning, so little fits them naturally. In We have little time, the message is that the amount is too small for what needs to be done. In everyday English, little often appears with resources, attention, patience, and money. It is common in formal writing too: There is little evidence and There was little hope. The form stays the same because uncountable nouns do not change into plurals here.
| Usage | Explanation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small amount | Use little with uncountable nouns when the amount is very small. | ||
| Limited time | Use little when you want to say that there is not much time available. | ||
| Insufficient support | Use little to describe a small amount of help, advice, or information. |
The wizard kept forgetting the soup recipe because the cupboard had almost nothing useful left.
The cupboard held little (few / little / a few / a little) sugar after the moon-pie experiment.
A few means some
A few changes the meaning completely. It means some, with a small but enough amount, and it uses plural countable nouns: a few friends, a few tickets, a few mistakes. Compare Few people understood the plan with A few people understood the plan. The first suggests not enough people understood it. The second suggests there were some people, and that is enough for the situation. In conversation, a few often sounds neutral or slightly positive because it recognizes a small amount without blaming the number.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a few | This means some, and the amount is small but enough to matter. | ||
| a few friends | This means a small number of friends, but not zero. | ||
| a few minutes | This means a short amount of time, but still enough for something. | ||
| a few days | This means a small number of days. | ||
| a few books | This means several books, but not many. |
A little means some
A little means some, with a small but enough amount, and it uses uncountable nouns: a little milk, a little time, a little patience. It often sounds more positive than little. We have a little time tells the listener that there is some time available. She showed a little interest means there was some interest, even if it was not strong. With uncountable nouns, this form is common when talking about ingredients, space, money, and personal qualities. The pattern is simple: a little + uncountable noun.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a little | This means some, and the amount is small but useful. | ||
| a little time | This means a short amount of time, but enough to do something. | ||
| a little help | This means a small amount of help. | ||
| a little money | This means a small amount of money. | ||
| a little advice | This means some advice, even if it is not much. |
Measurements and abstract nouns
Measurements often use the same choice. Say few dollars, few minutes, and few chances when the amount is too small. Say a few dollars, a few minutes, and a few chances when there is some amount available. For uncountable measures, use little water, little time, little progress, and little advice for a small or insufficient amount. Use a little water, a little time, a little progress, and a little advice when the amount is small but still useful. Abstract nouns follow the same rule when they behave like quantities. Hope, confidence, support, and energy usually take little or a little because they are treated as uncountable.
| Usage | Explanation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Measured quantity | Use few with plural countable nouns even when they describe amounts or measurements that can be counted. | ||
| Time expression | Use little with uncountable time expressions when you mean a small amount of time. | ||
| Abstract support | Use little with uncountable abstract nouns like help or advice when the amount is small. | ||
| Opportunities | Use few with plural nouns like opportunities when the number is small. |
Simple decision rule
Look at the noun first. If it is plural countable, choose few for a small and usually insufficient amount, or a few for some. If it is uncountable, choose little for a small and usually insufficient amount, or a little for some. The form tells the listener whether the amount is only small or actually enough for the situation. A sentence like Few students had time and a sentence like A little time was enough follow the same decision: countable noun or uncountable noun, then negative quantity or positive quantity.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Choose few if the noun is plural and countable. | ||
| Choose little if the noun is uncountable. | ||
| Use a few and a little when you want a more positive meaning. |
Take the Quiz!
Now you can choose few vs little confidently
You can match few and a few with plural countable nouns, and little and a little with uncountable nouns. You also know that few/little usually sounds negative (too small) while a few/a little sounds positive/neutral (some enough). With the decision rule, you can create correct sentences about numbers, resources, measurements, and abstract quantities.