A gaggle is a crowd of loud people or a noisy group or gathering. A gaggle is a flock of geese.
The Trials of O'Brien - 1965 A Gaggle of Girls 1-7 was released on: USA: 30 October 1965
The most common collective nouns are flock of geese or a gaggle of geese.When geese are in the air they are also referred to as skein, team, wedge or plump of geese.The term plump is only used when the birds are flying in close formation and the term wedge is derived from the V-formation the geese fly in.
No, the word 'geese' is the plural form for the singular noun goose. The collective nouns for geese are:a flock of geesea gaggle of geesea team of geesea trip of geesea skein of geese (in flight)
Examples of unusual collective nouns are:an ambush of tigersan attitude of teenagersa bask of crocodilesan embarrasment of richesa flamboyance of flamingosan equivocation of politiciansa gaggle of geesean implausibility of gnusan imposition of in-lawsa leap of leopardsa memory of elephantsa murder of crowsa murmuration of starlingsan obscurity of poetsa persistence of parentsa quiver of cobrasa romp of ottersa scourge of mosquitoesa shiver of sharksa smack of jellyfish
Examples of sentences with singular collective nouns:I picked up a bushel of corn at the farmers' market.In the summer, a troupe of actors performs in the park on Friday evenings.A herd of elephants had gathered at the watering hole.
A gaggle of geese.
Geese
Yes, the noun 'gaggle' is a collective noun for a gaggle of geese.
A GAGGLE of geese.
Gaggle of geese therefore you would find a goose in a gaggle.
A group, as in a gaggle of geese.
a gaggle
No, it is a noun. A gaggle is a group or a flock.
Geese is actually the collective term for goose.
she has a gaggle of meds in her room
gaggle <><><> Gaggle on the ground, a skein in flight.
A gaggle is a flock of geese