The noun 'spectator' is a common noun, a general word for someone watching a show, game, or other event; a viewer, a witness, an onlooker; a word for a person.
A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way; for example a crowd of spectators.
It is a collective noun.
No, sky is not a collective noun; sky is a common, concrete, singular noun.
No, track is not a collective noun. The word track is a common, singular noun.
No, the word spacesuit is a singular, common, concrete, compound noun; but not a collective noun.
Members is a common plural noun.
It is a collective noun.
No. It's just the plural form of a singular noun. If you said 'a group of spectators' the word group would be a collective noun.
The collective noun is a pride of lions.
The noun school is both a collective noun and a common noun. A common noun is a word for any person, place, or thing; school is a thing, a word for any school anywhere. A collective noun is a word to group a noun for like things; the collective noun school is used as a collective noun for a school of fish or a school of thought.
The word spectators is a noun, a plural, common noun for the singular noun spectator. The verb form is spectate (spectates, spectating, spectated).
The word spectators is a noun, a plural, common noun for the singular noun spectator. The verb form is spectate (spectates, spectating, spectated).
No, sky is not a collective noun; sky is a common, concrete, singular noun.
No, track is not a collective noun. The word track is a common, singular noun.
No, buffet is not a collective noun. The word buffet is a common, singular noun.
The noun staff is a singular, common, collective noun.
No, the word spacesuit is a singular, common, concrete, compound noun; but not a collective noun.
Members is a common plural noun.