A1 Countable vs Uncountable Nouns + Some/Any Grammar Test 2 – Academic English Foundations | IELTS TOEFL YDS
Practice much, many, and a lot of with countable and uncountable nouns in negatives, questions, and academic statements. This A1 grammar test supports IELTS, TOEFL, and YDS preparation.
Choose the best answer (A, B, or C) to complete each sentence.
Focus on:
many + plural countable nouns
much + uncountable nouns (especially in negatives/questions)
a lot of + both countable and uncountable (common in positive sentences)
Only one option is correct.
RESULTS
#1. There aren’t ___ students in the classroom today.
#2. I don’t have ___ time to finish the task now.
#3. The researcher has ___ data to analyze this week.
#4. How ___ books do you need for the project?
#5. How ___ information is included in the report?
#6. The university has ___ international students this year.
#7. We have ___ homework today, so we will study longer.
#8. There is not ___ evidence to support the claim.
#9. She reads ___ academic articles every week.
#10. Do you have ___ questions about the method?
#11. The lecture includes ___ examples, so it is easy to follow.
#12. I didn’t drink ___ water during the experiment.
#13. We don’t have ___ chairs for all participants.
#14. The professor doesn’t give ___ feedback in class.
#15. The course has ___ assignments, but they are short.
🧠 FULL TEACHING-LEVEL EXPLANATIONS (ALL 15)
🧩 1) aren’t many students
Structural reason: students = plural countable → many.
Meaning logic: Not a large number present.
Rhetorical effect: Attendance reporting.
Why wrong answers fail:
much is for uncountable
a lot of can work in speech, but negatives often prefer many/much in exam style
Exam note: YDS often expects many/much in negatives.
🧩 2) don’t have much time
Structural reason: time (quantity) is uncountable → much (especially in negatives).
Meaning logic: limited time.
Rhetorical effect: time pressure.
Why wrong answers fail:
many needs plural countable
a lot of is possible, but “don’t have much time” is more standard/exam-safe
Exam note: “much time” is a classic TOEFL phrase.
🧩 3) has a lot of data
Structural reason: a lot of works with uncountable nouns (data is treated as a mass noun in A1 contexts).
Meaning logic: large quantity.
Rhetorical effect: research workload emphasis.
Why wrong answers fail:
many is less natural here at A1 level
much is uncommon in positive statements without “so/too”
Exam note: Positive statements often prefer “a lot of” over “much.”
🧩 4) How many books
Structural reason: books = plural countable → How many.
Meaning logic: number of items.
Rhetorical effect: planning resources.
Why wrong answers fail:
how much is for uncountable
how a lot of is not a correct question form
Exam note: This is a core IELTS speaking question pattern.
🧩 5) How much information
Structural reason: information is uncountable → How much.
Meaning logic: amount, not number.
Rhetorical effect: evaluation of content volume.
Why wrong answers fail:
many needs plural countable
“How a lot of” is incorrect structure
Exam note: “information” is a classic uncountable trap.
🧩 6) many international students
Structural reason: students = plural countable → many.
Meaning logic: large number.
Rhetorical effect: institutional profile statement.
Why wrong answers fail:
much wrong noun type
“a lot” is incomplete; needs “a lot of”
Exam note: “a lot” vs “a lot of” is a frequent accuracy trap.
🧩 7) a lot of homework
Structural reason: homework is uncountable → a lot of works well.
Meaning logic: large quantity of work.
Rhetorical effect: workload increase.
Why wrong answers fail:
many needs countable
much is less common in positive sentences like this
Exam note: IELTS speaking often uses “a lot of homework.”
🧩 8) not much evidence
Structural reason: evidence is uncountable → much in negative.
Meaning logic: insufficient support.
Rhetorical effect: academic caution/critique.
Why wrong answers fail:
many wrong noun type
a lot of could work, but “not much evidence” is a standard academic phrase
Exam note: TOEFL reading uses “not much evidence.”
🧩 9) reads many academic articles
Structural reason: articles = plural countable → many.
Meaning logic: high reading volume.
Rhetorical effect: diligence signal.
Why wrong answers fail:
much wrong type
“a lot” incomplete without “of” + noun
Exam note: many + plural is a safe exam default.
🧩 10) Do you have many questions?
Structural reason: questions = plural countable → many.
Meaning logic: checks if there are numerous questions.
Rhetorical effect: classroom checking.
Why wrong answers fail:
much wrong noun type
“a lot” incomplete
Exam note: Any vs many: “Do you have any questions?” is also common, but this item tests many/much contrast.
🧩 11) includes a lot of examples
Structural reason: examples = plural countable → a lot of works.
Meaning logic: many examples make it easier.
Rhetorical effect: clarity/pedagogy emphasis.
Why wrong answers fail:
much wrong type
many could work, but this sentence is designed to reinforce “a lot of” in positives
Exam note: IELTS speaking favors “a lot of” naturally.
🧩 12) didn’t drink much water
Structural reason: water uncountable + negative → much.
Meaning logic: small amount.
Rhetorical effect: factual lab note.
Why wrong answers fail:
many wrong noun type
“a lot” incomplete
Exam note: “much water” appears in science contexts.
🧩 13) don’t have many chairs
Structural reason: chairs plural countable → many.
Meaning logic: insufficient number.
Rhetorical effect: logistics problem.
Why wrong answers fail:
much wrong type
“a lot” incomplete
Exam note: Very common in YDS sentence completion.
🧩 14) doesn’t give much feedback
Structural reason: feedback is usually uncountable → much in negative.
Meaning logic: limited feedback.
Rhetorical effect: academic critique.
Why wrong answers fail:
many wrong noun type
“a lot” incomplete
Exam note: feedback is a frequent IELTS writing word, typically uncountable.
🧩 15) has many assignments
Structural reason: assignments plural countable → many.
Meaning logic: high number, but short.
Rhetorical effect: workload but manageable.
Why wrong answers fail:
much wrong noun type
“a lot” incomplete
Exam note: Many is common in academic course descriptions.






