Quantifiers: All, Most, Some, and No
Quantifiers: All, Most, Some, and No
Quantifiers tell us how much or how many of something exists. For example, you use all for 100%, most for the majority, some for an unspecified amount, and no for zero (like finding "no money" in an empty bank vault).
In this challenge, you will explore hilarious scenarios—from alien tourists to zombie apocalypses—while mastering the grammar rules behind these common words. You'll learn when to use these quantifiers directly before nouns (like "most students") versus when you need to add "of the" for specific groups (like "most of the students"). You will also tackle the tricky difference between using no and none ("no food" vs. "none of the food").
You'll work through 12 questions in a fun mix of single-choice, multi-choice, drop-down, and drag-and-drop formats.
Try the quiz to check your knowledge!
Countable and uncountable
Countable vs uncountable: countable nouns can be numbered and pluralised (one book, two books). Uncountable nouns can't (information, not informations). The distinction determines your choice of article, quantifier (much/many, few/little), and whether the noun can be plural.
Countable = takes a/an, has a plural, uses many/few. Uncountable = no a/an, no plural, uses much/little. Some nouns are both depending on meaning (coffee = the substance vs a coffee = a cup).
Diagnostic: can you say one ___, two ___s? Yes → countable. No → uncountable (use a unit phrase: a piece of, a bit of).
Determiner
Determiner vs adjective: both appear before a noun, but determiners specify which/how many while adjectives describe what kind. Determiners come first: the big cat (✅) vs big the cat (❌). You can stack adjectives (big fluffy cat) but generally only one determiner per noun.
A determiner is a function slot before a noun filled by articles, demonstratives, possessives, or quantifiers.
Diagnostic: does the word tell you which one or how many rather than what kind? → determiner. Does it describe a quality? → adjective.
Negation
Single vs double negatives: standard English uses ONE negative per clause (I don't see anything or I see nothing). Double negatives (I don't see nothing) are grammatical in many languages and some English dialects, but are non-standard in written/formal English. This is the #1 negation trap for speakers of Spanish, Russian, and French.
Negation = not after auxiliary/modal, or do-support. Negative words (never, nobody, nothing) negate alone without adding not.
Diagnostic: count the negatives in the clause. More than one? → double negative. Fix by replacing one with a positive (anything, anyone, ever).
Noun
Noun vs verb: the two core word classes. Nouns name things; verbs describe actions/states. Many English words can be both (run, play, cook, work) — only the sentence slot tells you which role it's playing. The run was exhausting (noun) vs I run every day (verb).
A noun names an entity. It interacts with articles, determiners, forms plurals, and controls verb agreement and pronoun choice.
Diagnostic: can you put the/a before it or pluralise it? → noun. Does it describe an action with tense? → verb. Can it do both? → check the sentence context.
Phrase
Phrase vs clause: a phrase has NO subject-verb pair (on the table, the old man). A clause HAS a subject-verb pair (the man sat, because she left). This is the fundamental structural division in grammar — clauses contain phrases, not the other way around.
A phrase = group of words functioning as one unit: noun phrase, verb phrase, prepositional phrase, adjective/adverb phrase. No subject + verb.
Diagnostic: does the word group have both a subject AND a verb? Yes → clause. No → phrase. Name the head word to identify the phrase type (noun = NP, preposition = PP, etc.).
Pronoun
Pronoun vs noun: nouns name explicitly (Sarah, the book). Pronouns substitute and point back (she, it). Pronouns are a closed class (you can't invent new ones easily), while nouns are open (new ones appear constantly). The main complication: pronouns still carry case marking that nouns have lost.
A pronoun replaces a noun or noun phrase. Types: personal, demonstrative, relative, interrogative, reflexive, indefinite.
Diagnostic: every pronoun must have a clear antecedent (the noun it replaces). If the reader can't tell which noun a pronoun refers to → ambiguity error.
Quantifier
Quantifier vs determiner: quantifiers ARE a type of determiner — they sit before nouns and specify "how much/many." The distinction matters because quantifiers are constrained by countability: many only with countable, much only with uncountable. Other determiners (the, this, my) don't have this restriction.
A quantifier = vague amount before a noun (all, some, any, many, few, much, little, several, each, every). Must match noun countability.
Diagnostic: is the noun countable? → many/few/several. Uncountable? → much/little. Unsure about the noun? → check if you can say one ___, two ___s.
Word order
English (SVO) vs other patterns: English relies on word ORDER to show who does what (Dog bites man ≠ Man bites dog). Inflected languages (Latin, Russian, German) use case endings and can scramble order freely. In English, changing order changes meaning or requires special constructions (inversion, cleft sentences).
Word order = how English marks grammatical relationships. SVO is the default; fixed adjective order; adverb placement varies by type.
Diagnostic: does your sentence sound "off" even though all word forms are correct? → probably a word order issue. Try moving the element back to default SVO position.
Collocations
Collocation vs idiom: both are fixed expressions, but collocations are transparent (you can guess the meaning from the words: heavy rain = a lot of rain), while idioms are opaque (kick the bucket ≠ literally kick anything). Collocations are about which words pair naturally; idioms are about hidden meaning.
Collocations are habitual word combinations: make a decision, strong coffee, take a shower. Grammar allows alternatives, but fluency demands the conventional pairing.
Diagnostic: if the meaning is clear but the combination sounds "off" to native ears (do a mistake instead of make a mistake) — it's a collocation issue.
A2 | Elementary | Pre-intermediate
A2 vs B1: A2 handles routine transactions and simple past narration. B1 handles connected discourse, explaining reasons, and understanding main points in clear standard speech. If you can tell what happened but not why it matters, you're still A2.
A2 is the elementary level of the CEFR: past simple, present perfect, first conditional, basic modals, and routine communication about familiar topics.
Diagnostic: can you link ideas with because, although, so that and hold a conversation beyond scripted topics? No → A2. Yes → moving into B1.
Medium
Medium vs Easy: Easy has one obviously correct answer and clearly wrong distractors. Medium has one correct answer but plausible distractors — you need to actually know the rule, not just guess from sound.
The Medium tag filters for A2–B1 challenges with realistic difficulty: one rule per question, plausible alternatives, everyday contexts.
Diagnostic: if you're scoring 90%+ on Easy, move here. If you're below 60% on Medium, go back to Easy for that topic. Target 70–80% accuracy for maximum learning.