When I’m speaking English, I think I use not a lot and not much interchangeably. I’ve thought that maybe grammatically there is a difference between the phrases.
Are there cases where I should use not a lot instead of not much, or can I use them interchangeably?
I don’t like Japanese food very much.
I don’t like Japanese food a lot.
I don’t watch TV very much.
I don’t watch TV a lot.
I don’t know much about Western history.
I don’t know a lot about Western history.
Answer
What great examples!
As for the last set of sentences: I’d call them just about interchangeable, except that “a lot” would be regarded as less formal. (NOAD tags “a lot” as “informal,” e.g.) If I was proofreading my own writing, I’d probably change “I don’t know a lot about” to “I don’t know much about.” Either would be fine in conversation, though.
I don’t know much about Western history. {okay}
I don’t know a lot about Western history. {okay in conversation, perhaps a bit informal for writing}
As for the middle set: I’d rephrase the latter sentence to read, “I don’t watch a lot of TV.” The first one could also be rephrased (“I don’t watch very much TV”), but those two sentences have slightly different meanings: “I don’t watch TV very much” would probably be interpreted as “I don’t watch TV very often“; while “I don’t watch very much TV” sounds more like “I don’t watch many TV programs“. The difference is very subtle, but I think it’s existent. If I watched a half hour of TV nightly, but always the same program, I’d be inclined to say, “I don’t watch a lot of TV,” but not, “I don’t watch TV very much.” (After all, I watch nightly!)
I don’t watch TV very much. {you don’t watch TV very often}
I don’t watch a lot of TV. {you don’t watch too many TV programs}
I don’t watch TV a lot. {not wrong per se, but I’d recommed one of the others}
As for the first set, that latter sentence sounds off to me. Interestingly enough, I have no problem with its inverse: “I like Japanese food a lot.” However, when speaking in the negative, “I don’t like Japanese food very much” sounds much more polished than “I don’t like .. a lot.”
I don’t like Japanese food very much.
I don’t like Japanese food a lot. {use the first one, not this one}I like Japanese food very much.
I like Japanese food a lot. {in the positive, you can use either one}
I’m marveling how, even though the three pairs of examples all have the same sentence structure, my comments are different for all three. I guess this is a trickier problem than one might first expect.
Attribution
Source : Link , Question Author : tennis girl , Answer Author : J.R.