A few vs. A little – English Grammar Exercises for A2

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A2 » A few vs. A little – English Grammar Exercises for A2

Exercises:   123456789101112

Choose the best option (A, B, C, or D) to complete each sentence. All questions take place in a scenario where you are advising a sick or exhausted friend to take a short break before continuing their work.

1   You look absolutely exhausted. Just close your eyes for ______ minutes before you continue working.

     (A) a little

     (B) a few

     (C) many

     (D) a much

2   You can’t work properly when you have a fever. You definitely need ______ rest right now.

     (A) a little

     (B) a few

     (C) an

     (D) little

 I know you are busy, but getting ______ sleep will actually help you focus better later.

     (A) a few

     (B) little

     (C) a little

     (D) a lot

4   You have been coughing all morning. Why don’t you go home and sleep for ______ hours?

     (A) a little

     (B) a few

     (C) much

     (D) many

 Your throat sounds terrible. Drink ______ warm water with honey to soothe it.

     (A) a few

     (B) a little

     (C) many

     (D) a lots of

 The doctor said you should take ______ days off work to fully recover from this flu.

     (A) a little

     (B) little

     (C) a few

     (D) a much

7   If you take a short nap, you will get ______ energy back to finish your report.

     (A) a few

     (B) a little

     (C) many

     (D) little

 Please take ______ vitamin pills with your lunch; they will help boost your immune system.

     (A) a few

     (B) a little

     (C) much

     (D) a lots

9   You are still coughing badly. You should take ______ cough medicine before lying down.

     (A) a few

     (B) a little

     (C) many

     (D) a few of

10   Stop stressing over the deadline. You still have ______ time to rest before the meeting starts.

     (A) little

     (B) a few

     (C) a little

     (D) many

11   It is not healthy to stare at the screen all day. You should take ______ short breaks.

     (A) a little

     (B) a few

     (C) much

     (D) little

12   You haven’t eaten anything since morning. Let me heat up ______ chicken soup for you.

     (A) a few

     (B) a lot

     (C) a little

     (D) many

13   Your headache might go away if you open the window and get ______ fresh air.

     (A) a little

     (B) a few

     (C) few

     (D) a lots

14   Your back hurts because you sit too much. Just walk ______ steps around the living room.

     (A) a little

     (B) much

     (C) a few

     (D) little

15   To cure that terrible migraine, you just need a dark room and ______ peace and quiet.

     (A) a few

     (B) a little

     (C) many

     (D) an

16   Just sit on the sofa and take ______ quiet moments for yourself before the kids come home.

     (A) a little

     (B) a few

     (C) much

     (D) a lots of

17   If your stomach is upset, drinking ______ ginger tea will make you feel much better.

     (A) a few

     (B) many

     (C) a little

     (D) a few of

18   Put ______ drops of this essential oil on your pillow, and you will fall asleep quickly.

     (A) a little

     (B) much

     (C) a few

     (D) a lot

19   Don’t force yourself to go to the gym today. Save ______ strength for tomorrow’s work.

     (A) a little

     (B) a few

     (C) many

     (D) few

20   You look very stiff. Doing ______ gentle neck stretches will help release the tension.

     (A) a little

     (B) much

     (C) a few

     (D) little

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 B

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: “Minutes” is a plural countable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common mistake used for uncountable nouns. (D) is a structural error. (C) “many” is a meaning trap; advising someone to sleep for “many minutes” sounds unnatural and contradicts the idea of a short, quick break.

2 A

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Rest” is an uncountable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (B) “a few” is the common error. (C) is a structural error (“an” cannot be used with an uncountable noun). (D) “little” is a heavy meaning trap; “little rest” means “almost no rest,” which is the exact opposite of what the sick friend needs.

3 C

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Sleep” is an uncountable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is a common mistake. (D) is a structural error (missing “of”). (B) “little” is a meaning trap; getting “little sleep” (almost none) will not help the person focus.

4 B

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: “Hours” is a plural countable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a classic mistake because students often associate hours directly with “time” (uncountable). (C) is a structural error. (D) “many” is a meaning trap; sleeping for “many hours” means taking a long, deep sleep, which contradicts the advice of just taking a short nap before returning to work.

5 B

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Water” is a liquid, making it uncountable.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is incorrect. (C) and (D) are structural errors.

6 C

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: “Days” is a plural countable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common mistake. (D) is a structural error. (B) “little” is a structural error (cannot be used with plural nouns) and has a negative meaning.

7 B

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Energy” is an abstract, uncountable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is a common mistake. (C) is a structural error. (D) “little” is a meaning trap; getting “little energy” back means you remain exhausted.

8 A

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: “Pills” (tablets/medicine) is a plural countable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (B) “a little” is a common mistake. (C) and (D) are structural errors.

9 B

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Medicine” (as a liquid or mass concept) is an uncountable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is the common error. (C) and (D) are structural errors.

10 C

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Time” is an uncountable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (B) “a few” is a common mistake. (D) is a structural error. (A) “little” is a strong meaning trap; saying “you have little time” means “you are out of time/late,” which would make the friend panic instead of stop stressing!

11 B

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: “Breaks” is a plural countable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common error. (C) and (D) are structural errors for countable nouns.

12 C

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Soup” is a liquid and therefore uncountable.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is a common mistake. (D) is a structural error. (B) is a structural error (missing “of”).

13 A

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Air” is an uncountable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (B) “a few” is a common mistake. (C) and (D) are structural errors.

14 C

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: “Steps” is a plural countable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common mistake. (B) and (D) are structural errors.

15 B

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Peace and quiet” is an abstract, uncountable phrase.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is a common mistake. (C) and (D) are structural errors.

16 B

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: “Moments” is a plural countable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common error because students confuse “moments” with the uncountable concept of “time.” (C) and (D) are structural errors.

17 C

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Tea” is a liquid and uncountable.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a few” is a common mistake. (B) and (D) are structural errors.

18 C

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: While oil is uncountable, “drops” are plural and countable.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a trap because learners focus on the “essential oil” rather than the countable unit “drops.” (B) and (D) are structural errors.

19 A

Explanation: –  [a little]. Why it is correct: “Strength” is an abstract, uncountable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (B) “a few” is a common mistake. (C) and (D) are structural errors.

20 C

Explanation: –  [a few]. Why it is correct: “Stretches” (the physical exercises) is a plural countable noun.

  • Distractor Analysis: (A) “a little” is a common mistake. (B) and (D) are structural errors.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

1 The Basic Rule

  • Use A few with Plural Countable Nouns (things you can count: 1, 2, 3..).
  • Use A little with Uncountable Nouns (things you cannot count, like liquids, concepts, or mass nouns).

2 The Biggest Trap: Time vs. Units of Time

Many learners get confused when talking about time and resting. Here is the strict rule:

  • The word “Time” itself is UNCOUNTABLE.
    • Correct: “Take a little time to rest.” (NOT: a few time)
  • The words “Rest” and “Sleep” are UNCOUNTABLE.
    • Correct: “Get a little sleep.” (NOT: a few sleep)
  • However, Units of Time (Hours, Minutes, Days, Seconds, Moments) are COUNTABLE.
    • Correct: “Sleep for a few hours.” (NOT: a little hours)
    • Correct: “Rest for a few minutes.” (NOT: a little minutes)

3 Positive vs. Negative Meaning

Always remember to include the article “a” when advising a friend!

  • A little / A few = Some (Positive, enough to help you recover).
  • Little / Few = Almost none (Negative, which means you are still sick or tired).

Exercises:   123456789101112

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