When use a lot of?
It can be used with any of the values.
When Much has the value of an adjective, it is placed before the noun, with which it agrees in gender and number.
"Penelope Cruz is a very successful person."
"I have a lot of friends."
"Loli is hungry."
There are a lot of chairs in this room.
Mucho agrees in gender and number with the noun to which it refers when it has the function of a pronoun.
Is Penélope Cruz successful?
"So much!"
Do you have any friends?
Not many, really.
"Is Loli hungry?"
He has eaten a lot.
How many chairs are in this room?
A hundred people or more is what it is.
The value of the adverb is variable when Much has an value.
This skirt suits you very well.
"Yes a lot."
We are tired of this situation.
It was much.
My students study hard.
"John reads a lot."
It's better to be sorry than to have regrets.
"This is worse than I thought."
The movie is duller than I expected.
"You arrive by car much earlier."
When Much Ms and Much Less are placed before a word, they function as an conjugate and agree in gender and number.
It is much colder than last year.
I have more friends now than when I was younger.
Daylight hours in winter are less than in summer.
It can be placed before other words and can be used in a variety of ways.
The degree of the word that precedes it is expressed.
Susana is very pretty.
"Jorge is not very productive."
I live far from the center.
I am not well today.
"I don't like the way meat is done."
"Spanish is a very well studied language."
So and So Much are used the same as Very/MUCH.
Both of them can work.
I could eat a horse.
I could fall asleep here.
I have so many friends that it's hard to see them all.
There are so many boxes that we can't move.
Don't put all that dough in it.
I don't want that much.
"He doesn't study as much as he should."
The damage will get worse the longer the Pandemic continues.
TAN has been used before.
I don't know if I will finish the novel.
1 When it accompanies a verbs, it is an adverb. In this case, it doesn't change in gender or number.
It rained a lot last night.
It was raining.
I love you so much. I want it.
There are 2.
When it accompanies/modifies a noun, it's an speach. Depending on the word it accompanies, it inflects in genders and numbers.
I drank a lot. There is a wine called SuatanTIVE WINE.
There are many people waiting in line. The people have a gun.
1.
It is an adverb that accompanies/modifies other adverbs. It doesn't change in number or gender.
These fruits are very good.
Ajective is the name for it.
I feel tired.
He left early. Early.
Many expressions are formed with much.
Ex: a lot bigger or a lot smaller.
It was much more than less.
long before and after
It was much better.
1.
It's an adjective, and it means everything necessary/suFFICIENT, when it's followed by a verb or a word.
He isn't mature enough to live alone.
The temperature is not enough to melt the glass.
There aren't enough people to start.
2.
It is an adverb when it is used in conjunction with a verbs and means everything NECESSARY, but in a permissible or accepted quotient.
There's enough.
The child has advanced a lot.
1 It's an inflect in gender and number, depending on the word it accompanies. It must go before the word and means more than is necessary or convenient, or what is considered correct.
It is too hot.
Although there are some exceptions, a general rule is that muy is an adverb and always goes before the other ones, while much, much, many and many are adjectives and are placed before the nouns or the verbs.
What is the correct word? It is a lot big.
The first sentence is the correct one because big is an ective and the only way to use it is as an ective.
Which sentence is correct now? There are many people.
The correct one is the second one because people in a name and in front of the names can only use words like many and not very.
Many of them are in the feminine because the adjectives always agree with the nouns they accompany. We can have a lot, a lot, a lot, a lot, a lot if the name is masculine, feminine, singular or plural.
Behind a verbs cannot be put very nicely because it can never go alone and is used a lot. Mucho is an adverb and is always in the masculine singular.
I like ice cream.
The opposite of de mucho es poco can be used in two different ways.
You can review these rules in a visual way with my Infographic.
In this video, you have an explanation of when and how to use graphic support so that you understand it better. In my Premium Zone, you can do a number of exercises to practice this topic, as well as download the PDFs of the video so that you can review it whenever and wherever you want.
The use of the words very and very customary can cause some doubts.
Both things have the same meaning.
Some examples:
It is not the same despite having the same meaning.
Advérbios de intensidade are used before adjectives.
Some examples:
Mucho is a determinative word used before words.
Some examples:
When you see a lot before a nouns, it agrees in gender and number.
Examples:
There are excees despite the use rule indicating that we must use or very before.
Se o advérbio para antes, menor, debemos usar mucho, no.
Some examples:
The difference between the use of each um is established by the function of the words surrounding you, which is what they have the same meaning.
Oh, see:
You can see a summary of the use of very and very much in the video.
1
The UECE is in 2015.
The correct use of the form is indicated.
The meat was salty.
After noon it arrived. I like coffee that is very hot. We have to work very hard.
There are 2.
The UECE is for the year of
The shortened form completes the sentence correctly.
She always says that she loves me. The temperature is pleasant, but not hot.
I'm telling you seriously. It will be better if it is done this way.