Using "Less" and "Fewer" Correctly We use
"less" to describe
quantities that cannot be counted individually (less water, less sugar, less flour, less rice, less food, less fuel, less paper, less homework, less hair, etc.):
This bottle contains
less water than that one. (
correct)
This bottle contains
fewer water than that one. (
incorrect!)
"Less" is also used with words such as
time,
money,
patience,
work,
stress,
effort,
honesty,
fun,
love and other usually
abstract nouns:
I have
less time to spend with my friends recently. (
correct)
I have
fewer time to spend with my friends recently. (
incorrect!)
Tom has
less money now and therefore he will drive a little less. (
correct)
Tom has
fewer money now and therefore he will drive a little less. (
incorrect)
I have
less patience than my sister. (
correct)
I have
fewer patience than my sister. (
incorrect)
"Less" is used before a
plural noun that denotes a
measure of distance, time, amount, etc. :
The town where I live is
less than twenty miles from the capital. (
correct)
The town where I live is
fewer than twenty miles from the capital. (
incorrect)
She has been working there for
less than three years. (
correct)
She has been working there for
fewer than three years. (
incorrect!)
(
we use "less" because the sentence refers to a single period of time, not individual years)
Your English essay should be five hundred words or
less. (
correct)
Your English essay should be five hundred words or
fewer. (
incorrect)
I have
less than five dollars in my pocket. (
correct)
I have
fewer than five dollars in my pocket. (
incorrect)
Note: When we talk about specific dollar bills or coins we might say:
I have
fewer than twenty silver dollars in my collection. (
correct)
"Fewer" refers to
separate (countable) items (fewer apples, fewer potatoes, fewer cubes of sugar, fewer students, fewer people, fewer drinks, fewer attempts, fewer errors, fewer rules, etc.):
There were
fewer apples on the table in the afternoon than in the morning. (
correct)
There were
less apples on the table in the afternoon than in the morning. (
incorrect)
I hope that the next time I will find
fewer grammatical errors in your writing. (
correct!)
I hope that the next time I will find
less grammatical errors in your writing. (
incorrect!)
There were
fewer people than expected at the party but everyone there had a good time. (
correct)
Fewer and
fewer people nowadays choose to take marriage vows, most preferring to live together as partners. (
correct)
(
in informal English "less people" is often used)
^^^
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