How Much vs How Many in English
Use 'how many' with plural countable nouns and 'how much' with uncountable nouns. So we say "How many people are coming?" (people can be counted) but "How much sugar do you want?" (sugar cannot). 'How much...?' also asks the price of something, as in "How much is this?" The trick is knowing whether the noun is countable: if you can put a number in front of it (two coffees, three books), reach for 'how many'; if you can't (water, money, time), use 'how much'.
Examples
- How many people are coming? asking the number of people
- How much sugar do you want? asking the amount of sugar
- How much is this? asking the price
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
-
Ask How much people are coming? and every English speaker hears the mistake in a heartbeat. One tiny word gives you away.
-
The good news: there's one clean rule behind it. The choice depends entirely on whether the thing you're counting can be counted one by one. Let's lock it in.
-
Countable nouns are things you can split into separate units and put a number on โ one book, two books, three books. Uncountable nouns come as a mass you can't count piece by piece โ water, money, time. You measure those, you don't number them.
-
Here's the giveaway. With how many, the noun is always plural โ many things. With how much, the noun stays singular, because you never break it into pieces. Watch for that ending.
-
Start with people. You can count them, so it's how many, and notice the plural. How many people are coming?
-
Apples are countable too โ one apple, two apples. So again, how many, plural noun. How many apples do you need?
-
Now switch to sugar. You can't count sugar one grain at a time in normal speech โ it's a mass. So it's how much, and the noun stays singular. How much sugar do you want?
-
Money is the classic uncountable trap. You count coins, but money itself is a mass โ so it's how much, never how many. How much money do you have?
-
And here's a super useful one. To ask the price of something, English uses how much โ you're really asking how much money it costs. How much is this?
-
Now the mistake learners make constantly. People are countable, so How much people is wrong โ it has to be how many people. Match the word to the noun.
-
And the trap in the other direction. Water is a mass โ you can't say two waters here โ so How many water is wrong. It must be how much water.
-
One quick nuance to sound natural. A few nouns flip depending on meaning. Time as a clock-amount is uncountable โ how much time. But times as separate occasions is countable โ how many times. Same word, two minds.
-
So remember it this way. Can you count it one by one? Use how many with a plural noun. Is it a mass, or a price? Use how much with a singular noun.