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Noa Levy
Hey! Is it correct to say “a few reasons why” or should I say “few reasons why”.
Jan 10, 2022 8:47 PM
Answers · 11
2
They’re opposite.
There are A few reasons why this is a good idea. I will state them here.
There are few reasons why this is a good idea. This should be stopped immediately.
Without the A you’re saying not worth talking about, just move on.
January 10, 2022
As a native speaker, I'm simply going by what sounds natural to me. I would definitely keep the "a".
For example, "There are a few reasons why I prefer to hang my laundry to dry, as opposed to putting my clothes in the dryer. First of all, ..."
If I read that sentence without the "a", it wouldn't sound right to me.
I hope that helps some :-)
January 10, 2022
I have 2-3 reasons
January 11, 2022
"A few reasons why.." is the correct usage here because you are stating a couple of reasons why you think something is a good idea.
"Few" is less than "A few" meaning that "A few" holds a greater value or amount or number of things than "few".
"Few" : 1 maybe 2 things
"A few" : 3 /4 /5 things
"Few" : not enough
"A few" : enough
January 11, 2022
I think the others got it. Just to make it simple
A few reasons = several reasons
Few reasons = not many reasons
January 11, 2022
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Noa Levy
Language Skills
English, Hebrew
Learning Language
English
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