The noun cattle is a common, plural noun for a group of bovines kept for the purpose of food or labor animals. Sometimes used as an alternate plural for cow (cows).
cow, bull
The noun "cattle" is only plural, never singular; a plural uncountable noun, a word for domesticated bovines as a group.
Cattle is plural. Calf is the singular noun.
The noun example is a singular, common, abstract noun.
Bovine, cow, cattlebeast, animal, critter, etc.
The noun 'cattle' is a plural uncountable noun (with no singular form), a word for domestic bovines (cows, heifers, steers, bulls, and oxen) held as property or raised for use, regardless of age, gender, type, breed or size. The noun 'cattle' is a type of uncountable noun called an aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements.The term for more than one bovine, is a cow, a heifer, a bull, etc.
The noun 'herd' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of animals, a collective noun (a herd of cattle, a herd of elephants).
give the singular indefinite noun
Ex: He is a good student. Here both he and is are in singular form. Ex: They are good students. This sentence is in plural form.
The word example is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun.
The word toy is singular.The plural would be toys.An example sentence for the singular is: be good and we will get you a new toy.An example sentence for the plural is: the cat was more interested in the box than his toys.
The singular noun is ride.
"Committee" can be used as both a singular and plural noun. When referring to the group as a whole, it is singular (e.g., "The committee has made a decision"). When emphasizing individual members or actions within the group, it can be plural (e.g., "The committee are discussing their findings").