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Instead of trying to explain to you about all those quantifiers, why don't you study from the given links below.
It is much easier to understand when you see lots of examples.
http://www.polseguera.org/advanced_english_grammar/few_little_many.php
1 Examples: There are a few plums. I don’t think we need to buy any today. There are few cherries; we’d better go and buy some. There’s a little time left. (= We still have enough time left.) There’s little time left. (= We do not have enough time left.)
A few and few are used with plural nouns; a little and little, with uncountable ones. If we leave out the a, it means that there is not enough of something; but if we kept it, it has a positive sense, ie there is/are not a lot, but enough for our own purposes. Little and few can be emphasized by very: There are very few cherries. There’s very little time left. If we put little before countable nouns, it means small: a little child/a small child.
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http://www.grammar.cl/Notes/Much_Many_Lot_Few.htm
Further more, if you use "lot of , a lot of , few , a few" as keywords in Google, you'd find tons of information on the items. It is one of the best ways to learn English.
http://www.google.com/search?q=lot+of+%2C+a+lot+of+%2C+few+%2C+a+few&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-GB:official&client=firefox-a
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24 ก.ย. 54 19:11:00
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