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They say some great men like Einstein and Swami Vivekanand used more.
As much as you want just honor God
it's uncountable since we can't say many times but much time
Girls needn't act helpless around guys.You needn't speak rudely to your grandparents!Note that needn't is rarely used today. It is much easier to simply write 'need not' (do or say whatever).
Asking what price something is, saying your age, pretty much everything you talk about: how many words you say, how many letters are in that word so forth
Do you mean "determiners"? Determiners are words like "the," "that," "my," "a/an," etc., that otherwise act mostly like adjectives but that don't have all the properties of normal adjectives. For instance, an adjective like "long" has comparative degree ("longer") and superlative degree ("longest"), but determiners do not (e.g. we cannot say "the-er" or "the-est" or "my-er" or "my-est").
In English, articles, demonstratives, and possessive determiners cannot co-occur in the same phrase, while any number of adjectives are typically allowed.A big green English book* The his book (note however that Italian allows exactly this construction - il suo libro)He is happy .2 * He is the.Most determiners cannot occur alone in predicative complement position; most adjectives can. happy, happier, happiest(However in colloquial usage an English speaker might say [eg] "This is very much my house" for emphasis)Most determiners are not gradable, while adjectives typically are. Each likes something different.* Big likes something different.Some determiners have corresponding pronouns, while adjectives don't. a big person / big peoplemany people / * many personAdjectives can modify singular or plural nouns, while some determiners can only modify one or the other.Adjectives are never obligatory, while determiners often are.
Much is a determiner used with uncountable nouns, e.g. I don't have much time? There isn't much water.Many is a determiner used with countable nouns, e.g. His job had many responsibilities. How many times have I told you?
If you are trying to say " how much do you earn?", it would be "cuanto ganas?" how much do you get can be used in many different contexts, so some more information will be needed to give you an exact translation.
depends on too many variables to say. the main variable is the yields of the bombs used.
you pretty much answered your own question... that's why they say it.
We say 'much time' as in "We don't have much time before the test begins."
No, you can say "I have a lot of homework." Or "I have to much homework"
It sounds much better to say: I used to be a picky eater but now I am not
many : 'adeed عديد much : katheer كثير
It depends on the bucket being used. Check the bucket because it might say how many litres the bucket can hold
you have to subtract because when you say hw many than you have to add when you say how much you have to subtract.