Few-shot image generation aims to generate images of high quality and great diversity with limited data. However, it is difficult for modern GANs to avoid overfitting when trained on only a few images. The discriminator can easily remember all the training samples and guide the generator to replicate them, leading to severe diversity degradation. Several methods have been proposed to relieve overfitting by adapting GANs pre-trained on large source domains to target domains with limited real samples. In this work, we present a novel approach to realize few-shot GAN adaptation via masked discrimination. Random masks are applied to features extracted by the discriminator from input images. We aim to encourage the discriminator to judge more diverse images which share partially common features with training samples as realistic images. Correspondingly, the generator is guided to generate more diverse images instead of replicating training samples. In addition, we employ cross-domain consistency loss for the discriminator to keep relative distances between samples in its feature space. The discriminator cross-domain consistency loss serves as another optimization target in addition to adversarial loss and guides adapted GANs to preserve more information learned from source domains for higher image quality. The effectiveness of our approach is demonstrated both qualitatively and quantitatively with higher quality and greater diversity on a series of few-shot image generation tasks than prior methods.