How Much, How Many, How Often Exercises
A2-B1 Level
How becomes much more useful when you combine it with other words to ask about
quantity, frequency, duration, distance, and age. The six most important
combinations at this level are: how much (for uncountable things like money,
water, and time), how many (for countable things you can number), how
often (for frequency — how regularly something happens), how long
(for duration — how much time something takes), how far (for distance), and
how old (for age).
The most common mistake is mixing up how much and how many. Use 'how much' when you cannot count the noun individually: 'How much milk do we need?' Use 'how many' when you can put a number before the noun: 'How many eggs do we need?' Another frequent error is answering 'how often' with a single time instead of a frequency: 'How often do you exercise?' needs an answer like 'Twice a week' — not 'On Tuesday.' These 'how + word' combinations appear in Cambridge A2 Key and B1 Preliminary examinations.
The most common mistake is mixing up how much and how many. Use 'how much' when you cannot count the noun individually: 'How much milk do we need?' Use 'how many' when you can put a number before the noun: 'How many eggs do we need?' Another frequent error is answering 'how often' with a single time instead of a frequency: 'How often do you exercise?' needs an answer like 'Twice a week' — not 'On Tuesday.' These 'how + word' combinations appear in Cambridge A2 Key and B1 Preliminary examinations.
Quick Rule
how much + uncountable noun | how many + countable noun | how often / how long / how far / how old + question
- 1.How much time do we have before the train leaves? (how much — uncountable quantity)
- 2.How many people didn't come to the meeting? (how many — negative, countable quantity)
- 3.How often does she visit her grandparents? (how often — asking about frequency)
- 4.How far is it from London to Manchester? (how far — asking about distance)
- 5.How long have they lived in this city? (how long — duration with present perfect)
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