Вопрос задан 22.02.2019 в 11:05. Предмет Английский язык. Спрашивает Вейс Аина.

Помогите пожалуйста! (( Some or Any __________ .Вставить some/any. 1.There is ___ sugar. 2.Can I

have ____ tea? 3.Would you like ____ cake? 4.There is ____ cheese. 5. There aren't ____ cabbages. 6.There are ____ tomatoes. 7.There isn't ____ butter. Поставить much/many. 1.How ____ biscuits. 2.How ____ butter. 3.How ____lemons. 4.How ____ jam. 5.How ____ rice. 6. How ____ onions. 7. How _____ water.
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Отвечает Рибчак Анжеліка.
1.some. 1.many.
2.any. 2.much.
3.any. 3.many.
4 some. 4.much.
5.any. 5.much.
6.some. 6.many.
7.any. 7.much.
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Отвечает нейросеть ChatGpt. Будьте внимательны, ответы нейросети могут содержать ошибочные или выдуманные данные.

Some or Any

1. There is some sugar. 2. Can I have some tea? 3. Would you like some cake? 4. There is some cheese. 5. There aren't any cabbages. 6. There are some tomatoes. 7. There isn't any butter.

Much or Many

1. How many biscuits? 2. How much butter? 3. How many lemons? 4. How much jam? 5. How much rice? 6. How many onions? 7. How much water?

In English, we use "some" when we want to express an indefinite quantity or amount of something, while "any" is used in negative sentences and questions. "Some" is used in positive sentences.

For example, in sentence 1, "There is some sugar," we are stating that there is an indefinite quantity of sugar. In sentence 2, "Can I have some tea?" we are making a request for an indefinite quantity of tea. In sentence 3, "Would you like some cake?" we are offering an indefinite quantity of cake.

In contrast, in sentence 5, "There aren't any cabbages," we are stating that there is a lack of cabbages. In sentence 7, "There isn't any butter," we are stating that there is a lack of butter. In the questions, we use "any" to ask about the quantity or amount of something.

For the second part of your question, we use "much" with uncountable nouns and "many" with countable nouns. Uncountable nouns are things that cannot be easily counted or separated into individual units, such as butter, jam, rice, and water. Countable nouns are things that can be counted, such as biscuits, lemons, and onions.

In sentences 1, 3, and 6, we use "many" because we are asking about the quantity of countable nouns (biscuits, lemons, onions). In sentences 2, 4, 5, and 7, we use "much" because we are asking about the quantity of uncountable nouns (butter, jam, rice, water).

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