Hábitos saludables: cuantificadores y negación (A2)
Rellenar huecos con cuantificadores hablando de hábitos saludables al comer.
DannisCompleta: Para comer más sano, tomo yogur natural ____.
Correct: 0/6
Hints for this Quiz
Hint: "sin" = "without". Compare: "sin azúcar" — without sugar.
Why: "sin azúcar" = "without sugar". It is the healthiest choice in this context. The structure "sin + sustantivo" expresses the absence of something being added (here, sugar). Topics like healthy eating are often used to practice A2 vocabulary about lifestyle and habits in Spain.
Hint: basic negation pattern: "no + verbo + nada de + sustantivo".
Why: with negation we use "nada de + sustantivo": "No cenamos nada de fritos" = "We don’t eat any fried food for dinner at all." After "nada" you use "de + noun" without an article.
Hint: much(o/a/os/as) agrees with the noun; "agua" is feminine here: "mucha agua".
Why: "mucha" agrees with "agua" (feminine in grammatical gender, even though it takes "el" in the singular: "mucha agua"). "Almost two liters" is "a lot", so we use "mucha". The forms mucho/mucha/muchos/muchas agree with the noun.
Hint: with a plural noun use muchas/muchos; with negation use "nada de + sustantivo".
Why: 1) "muchas verduras" has correct agreement; 2) "nada de bollería" is the correct negation pattern with "nada de". In Spain, going to the market for fresh produce is a typical everyday food-culture scene, which makes it a useful context for practicing this topic.
Hint: always say "nada de + sustantivo" (without an article).
Why: the correct structure is "no + verbo + nada de + sustantivo": "No tomo nada de azúcar." The other options break this rule: you must have "de" before the noun, and the negation is built with "no + nada de".
Hint: "un poco de + nombre"; "nada de + nombre"; "much(o/a) + nombre" (without "de").
Why: "un poco de + sustantivo" (a little) and "nada de + sustantivo" (none at all) are correct patterns. "Mucho de azúcar" is incorrect: with a noun it’s "mucho/mucha + sustantivo" (without "de"), while with "un poco" you must use "de". In the context of healthy habits, it’s common to highlight avoiding sugar ("sin/nada de") and moderation ("un poco de").
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