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  • Hey, guys. I'm Alex. Thanks for clicking and welcome to this lesson on

  • "less" and "fewer". So these are comparative adjectives that we use when we want to compare two

  • things, usually. Or when we want to make a statement that talks about how something

  • is decreasing or a decreased number of something or somebody is happening,

  • etc. So, we have two sentences here.

  • We have, "Fewer/less people today carry cash",

  • and we have, "There is fewer," or,

  • "less privacy today because of social media".

  • So, which of these words do you think is correct in these two sentences? All

  • right, so again, I'm going to give you the correct answer,

  • and then I'm going to explain why it's the answer and what the rule is.

  • So, the first sentence we have,

  • "Fewer", or, "less people today carry cash".

  • What do you think it is? All right,

  • if you said, "Fewer people today carry cash.",

  • you are absolutely correct. Okay.

  • I'll explain in a moment.

  • Stick with me. Again, the second one,

  • "There is fewer or less privacy today because of social media".

  • The answer here you have probably deduced is "less".

  • So, why? Why do we say "fewer people" and not "less people".

  • Maybe you're walking around right now and you're saying,

  • "Yeah, there are less people here than I expected".

  • Or, "There are less bottles of water than what we really need".

  • Okay? If you're saying those things,

  • you're wrong, and I'm going to tell you why.

  • Grammatically you're wrong. You're not wrong as a person.

  • As a human being, I'm sure you're lovely.

  • However, grammatically, it's incorrect. Okay, so "fewer"...

  • ...fewer we use with countable nouns, all right?

  • So if you can say one,

  • two, three, four of whatever the noun is,

  • you can use "fewer" with it.

  • So, for example, people. You can count people.

  • You can count water bottles.

  • You can count computers. You can count tables,

  • etc., etc., etc. Okay? So if it's countable,

  • use "fewer", and if you've probably discerned by now,

  • with "less" this is used with uncountable nouns.

  • Okay? Now, what I mean by uncountable nouns,

  • things you can't count. These can be abstract concepts like privacy or freedom,

  • or liberty, or any number of things that you can't count such as water.

  • Right? So you don't say, "Wow.

  • There is fewer water in this bottle than what I was expecting or what I

  • hoping for". You'd say, "No.

  • There's less water in here than what I would like".

  • Okay? So, again, if you can count it,

  • use "fewer". If you can't count it,

  • use "less". Very simple rule, easy to follow.

  • If you would like to test your understanding of this grammar point,

  • please check out the quiz on engvid.com.

  • Good luck, guys.

  • Learn English for free www.engvid.com

Hey, guys. I'm Alex. Thanks for clicking and welcome to this lesson on

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