Few Words Said

The meaning of FEW is not many persons or things. How to use few in a sentence.

(A) little and (a) few are quantifiers meaning ‘some’. Little and few have negative meanings. We use them to mean ‘not as much as may be expected or wished for’. …

Few and a few are both used in front of nouns, but they do not have the same meaning. You use a few simply to show that you are talking about a small number of people or things. I'm having a dinner party for a few close friends. Here are a few ideas that might help you.

few (comparative fewer or less, superlative fewest or least) There are a few cars (=some, but a relatively small number) in the street. Quite a few people (=a significant number) were pleasantly surprised. I think he's had a few drinks. (This usage is likely ironic.) The few cheapest hotels I could find are the farthest too.

The few means a small set of people considered as separate from the majority, especially because they share a particular opportunity or quality that the others do not have.

Few Words Said 5

The Few surname appeared 2,292 times in the 2010 census and if you were to sample 100,000 people in the United States, approximately 1 would have the surname Few.

Few Words Said 6

Do you know how to use a few, few, very little and a bit of? Test what you know with interactive exercises and read the explanation to help you.

Few Words Said 7

Few is a word for a small, non-specific number. A few is somewhere between a couple and a whole bunch. When you say you're going to have a few fries, you'd better not eat the whole order — a few is a tiny number. It takes more than a few people to play basketball, though they could probably play two-on-two.