Choose the correct quantifier: ‘___ of the two answers is correct.’
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'Neither' refers to not one and not the other of two items.
'None' is more commonly used for more than two.
Practice CSS questions with answers and explanations.
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'Neither' refers to not one and not the other of two items.
'None' is more commonly used for more than two.
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'Herself' emphasizes 'the principal' but is not required for the sentence's grammar.
This emphatic use is called intensive.
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'Students' is a plural countable noun.
'Several' correctly indicates an unspecified number greater than two.
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'Whose' shows possession between the woman and the car.
It introduces a relative clause modifying 'woman.'
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'Money' is an uncountable noun.
'Much' is used in questions with uncountable nouns.
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The pronoun is the object of the preposition 'to.'
Formal standard English therefore uses 'whom.'
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'Books' is a plural countable noun.
'Many' is used to ask about the number of countable items.
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'That' can refer to a thing and functions as the subject of the relative clause.
The clause identifies which book is meant.
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'Water' is uncountable, so the comparative quantifier is 'less.'
'Fewer' is used with plural countable nouns.
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Repeating 'Ayesha' makes the actor clear, while 'her' naturally refers to Sana.
The other sentences contain ambiguous pronoun references.
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'Mistakes' is a plural countable noun.
The comparative quantifier 'fewer' is therefore correct.
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Singular 'they/their' is widely accepted for an indefinite or gender-neutral antecedent.
It avoids unnecessary gender assumptions.