Copy the following sentences choosing the correct pronoun: 1. How (much / many) pages have you translated? 2. We have received (much / many) valuable information. 3. He has but (few / little) mistakes in his thesis. 4. We sat at our translation for (many / much) hours. 5. I have a (little / few) time, I’ll do my best to help you. 6. (Much / many) debate has been generated by his controversial research paper. 7. She wanted (some / any) stamps, but there weren’t (some / any) in the machine. 18 A Grammar of English Practice Book for Law Students ЕXERCISES 8. Is there (some / any) one here who speaks English? 9. (Some / any) new facts have been recently discovered. 10. There must be (some / any) explanation to (some / any) phenomenon. 11. Have you heard (something / anything) about this criminal case? 12. Do you know (something / anything) on the English judicial system? 13. Only a (little / few) county judges ever receive judicial promotion. 14. England abolished the jury in civil cases in 1933, except for a (little / few) cases like defamation, false imprisonment or fraud. 15. The victim had (little / few) chance to reconstruct the crime. 16. (A few / little) magistrates were ready to define the crime as shoplifting and try it as a minor offence. 17. The lawyer had a (few / little) reasons to doubt that the crime was committed in a fit of rage. 18. (Some / any) instances of felonies were defined as murder, manslaughter, burglary, housebreaking, larceny, and rape. 19. At common law, with (few / little) exceptions, crimes are compounded of two elements: an act of commission constituting guilty conduct (Actus Reus) and guilty intention (Mens Rea). 20. (Some / any) torts are rather specific, e.g. trespass or false imprisonment. 21. There are (much / many) crimes known as either-way offences. 22. The House of Lords is considered the upper house of the British Parliament, but its political powers are (much / many) more limited than those of the lower house, the House of Commons.
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