A few vs. A little – English Grammar Exercises for A2
Choose the best option (A, B, C, or D) to complete each sentence. All questions take place in a scenario where a business is posting status updates on social media to build excitement for an upcoming grand opening or product launch.
1 The grand opening is almost here! We only have ______ days left until we open our doors.
(A) a little
(B) a few
(C) many
(D) a lots
2 We just need ______ more time to set up the new display shelves before we welcome you inside.
(A) a few
(B) little
(C) a little
(D) many
3 Our website will go live in just ______ hours! Are you ready to shop?
(A) a few
(B) a little
(C) much
(D) few
4 Please have ______ patience; we promise the new summer collection is worth the wait!
(A) a few
(B) many
(C) a lots
(D) a little
5 We have prepared ______ special surprises for our first 100 customers tomorrow morning.
(A) much
(B) a little
(C) a few
(D) little
6 Before we officially launch, let us share ______ details about our brand new menu.
(A) a little
(B) a few
(C) a much
(D) little
7 We will reveal ______ more information about the exclusive VIP party in our next post.
(A) a few
(B) an
(C) a little
(D) many
8 There are still ______ exclusive items left to unpack in the back room, and they look amazing!
(A) a few
(B) a little
(C) much
(D) little
9 Our amazing team is doing ______ extra work tonight to make everything perfect for you.
(A) a little
(B) a few
(C) a lots
(D) many
10 We are just adding ______ finishing touches to the store decorations right now.
(A) a little
(B) much
(C) a few
(D) few
11 We added ______ magic to our new skincare formula that you will absolutely love.
(A) a many
(B) a few
(C) little
(D) a little
12 If you arrive early, you might get ______ free gifts at the entrance!
(A) a few
(B) a little
(C) much
(D) little
13 We cleared ______ space in the main lobby so you can easily take photos with our mascot.
(A) a few
(B) an
(C) a little
(D) many
14 We only have ______ VIP spots left for the launch event, so sign up on our website now!
(A) a little
(B) a few
(C) much
(D) many
15 We posted ______ sneak peeks on our daily story. Go check them out before they disappear!
(A) much
(B) a little
(C) little
(D) a few
16 With ______ luck, we might even open the store one hour earlier than planned!
(A) a little
(B) a few
(C) a lots
(D) little
17 The grand reveal is happening in just ______ short moments! Stay tuned.
(A) a little
(B) much
(C) few
(D) a few
18 We want to build up ______ excitement before we finally show you the final design.
(A) a few
(B) a little
(C) many
(D) little
19 We made ______ last-minute changes to the schedule to make the opening event even better.
(A) a few
(B) a little
(C) much
(D) little
20 The staff only got ______ sleep last night, but we are so energized and ready to welcome you all!
(A) a few
(B) many
(C) a little
(D) much
ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS
1 B
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Days” is a plural countable noun. “A few days” creates excitement that the wait is very short.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common mistake for countable nouns. (D) is a structural error (should be “a lot of”). (C) “many” is a meaning trap; saying you have “only many days left” is contradictory and ruins the excitement of a fast countdown.
2 C
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Time” is an uncountable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is the common mistake. (D) “many” is incorrect for uncountable nouns. (B) “little” is a meaning trap; “little time” means “almost zero time,” which implies a panic/crisis, whereas “a little time” means they just need a small amount of extra time to finish up.
3 A
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Hours” is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a little” is a classic mistake. (C) “much” is incorrect for countable nouns. (D) “few” has a negative connotation (“almost zero hours”), which does not fit the enthusiastic tone of the countdown.
4 D
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Patience” is an uncountable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is the common error. (C) is a structural error. (B) “many” is grammatically incorrect for uncountable nouns.
5 C
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Surprises” is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a little” is incorrect for countable nouns. (A) “much” is incorrect. (D) “little” is grammatically incorrect and conveys a negative meaning.
6 B
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Details” is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is the common mistake. (C) is a structural error. (D) “little” is incorrect for plural countable nouns.
7 C
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Information” is an uncountable noun in English.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is an extremely common mistake because learners often think information can be counted. (B) “an” is a structural error (cannot be used with uncountable nouns). (D) “many” is incorrect for uncountable nouns.
8 A
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Items” is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a little” is the common mistake. (C) “much” is incorrect for countable nouns. (D) “little” is incorrect.
9 A
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Work” is an uncountable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a few” is a common error. (C) is a structural error. (D) “many” is incorrect for uncountable nouns.
10 C
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Touches” (as in “finishing touches”) is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common mistake. (B) “much” is incorrect. (D) “few” implies a negative meaning (almost no touches), which takes away from the idea of actively perfecting the store.
11 D
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Magic” is an abstract, uncountable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a few” is the common mistake. (A) is a structural error. (C) “little” is a meaning trap; adding “little magic” means adding almost none, making the product sound boring.
12 A
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Gifts” is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a little” is a common mistake. (C) “much” is incorrect. (D) “little” is incorrect.
13 C
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Space” (meaning physical room) is an uncountable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is the common error. (B) “an” is a structural error. (D) “many” is incorrect for uncountable nouns.
14 B
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Spots” (meaning available places) is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is incorrect. (C) “much” is incorrect. (D) “many” is a meaning trap; saying “we only have many spots left” contradicts the marketing tactic of creating scarcity.
15 D
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Sneak peeks” is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a little” is incorrect. (A) “much” is incorrect. (C) “little” is incorrect for plural nouns.
16 A
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Luck” is an uncountable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a few” is a common mistake. (C) is a structural error. (D) “little” is a meaning trap; “with little luck” means “with bad luck,” which is the opposite of the optimistic tone needed for an opening.
17 D
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Moments” is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common mistake for time-related words. (B) “much” is incorrect. (C) “few” has a negative tone that doesn’t fit the excitement.
18 B
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Excitement” is an abstract, uncountable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is the common mistake. (C) “many” is incorrect. (D) “little” is a strong meaning trap; building “little excitement” means you are intentionally making people bored!
19 A
Explanation: – [a few]. Why it is correct: “Changes” is a plural countable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (B) “a little” is a common error. (C) “much” is incorrect. (D) “little” is incorrect.
20 C
Explanation: – [a little]. Why it is correct: “Sleep” is an uncountable noun.
- Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is a common error. (B) “many” is incorrect. (D) “much” is a heavy meaning trap; “only got much sleep” contradicts the “but we are energized” contrast. They only got “a small amount” of sleep.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
1 The Basic Rule (Countable vs. Uncountable)
- Use A few with Plural Countable Nouns. When counting down to a launch, you will often use words like: days, hours, minutes, items, gifts, surprises, spots.
- Example: “Only a few days left!”
- Use A little with Uncountable Nouns. In business updates, you often deal with abstract concepts like: time, patience, information, space, luck, magic, excitement.
- Example: “We need a little time to prepare.”
2 Building Hype (The Positive Nuance)
- Using the article “a” before few or little gives the sentence a positive, enthusiastic tone. It means “some.”
- Omitting the “a” (few / little) creates a negative tone, meaning “almost none.”
- In marketing and social media statuses, you always want to sound positive and welcoming. Therefore, “We have a few surprises” sounds exciting, whereas “We have few surprises” sounds disappointing!
3 Watch out for “Information” and “Time”
- Never say “a few information” or “a few time”. These are strictly uncountable in English. Always use a little information and a little time. However, specific time measurements like seconds, minutes, hours, and days ARE countable, so you must use a few.
