The standard collective noun for the noun 'class' is 'a class of students'.
Example: A class of students painted the mural in the school lobby.
The noun 'class' is a general collective noun for groups of people or things.
Example: We cater to a very selective class of clients.
There are no collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is determined by its use. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns in a descriptive way. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are often used as collective nouns, but in this sentence they are not. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are not describing anyone.
Yes, an idiom is a group of words that have an established use and meaning. In order to include collective nouns under that description, the collective noun alone does not qualify, but the complete term using a collective noun does; for example a herd of cattle.
A spot of leopards would work. Collective nouns are not set in concrete; any noun suitable for the context can be used as a collective noun. A noun is not inherently a collective noun; a noun is determined to be a collective noun by its use in grouping people or things. The standard collective nouns for leopards are a leap of leopards (also spelled 'leep' or 'lepe') and a keep of leopards.
The collective noun is an audience of concert goers.
The collective nouns are a cache of money, a rouleau of money, a wad of money.The are no collective nouns for money that start with 'fo', however, you can use any noun that fits the context of the sentence, for example a fountain of money, a fortress of money, or a foolishness of money.A synonym for 'a lot of money' is a fortune. The noun fortune is not a collective noun. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way, for example a flock of birds.
There are no nouns used as collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a characteristic inherent in a noun The noun 'class' can be a collective noun for 'a class of students', but in this sentence, it is not functioning as a collective noun.
There are no collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is determined by its use. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns in a descriptive way. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are often used as collective nouns, but in this sentence they are not. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are not describing anyone.
A pack of wolves inhabits the woods behind the lodge.
Possibly but who has the time to write one? The word class nouns is a very large and open (new nouns can be added to the class) word class. So by the time someone writes the sentence there may be hundreds of new nouns.
The only guide for collective nouns is that it should be a noun. Collective nouns can be functional (a herd, a team, a bushel) or collective nouns can be fanciful (a murder, a flamboyance, an embarrassment). But the thing about collective nouns is that they are artifacts of language, there are no real rules. You may use the 'accepted' collective noun or you may use a noun that seems suitable (or expressive) to you.
The collective nouns are a cache of money, a rouleau of money, a wad of money.The are no collective nouns for money that start with 'm', however, you can use any noun that fits the context of the sentence, for example a mountain of money, a mass of money, a mess of money, etc.
Known as a clutch or a peep
Singular: You have no class if you wear jeans to a wedding or a funeral.Collective: The cooking students made some treats for the class of kindergartners.
Nouns themselves are not inherently 'collective nouns', they become collective nouns by their use; they give a clearer picture of a group of people or things or they can add color to a description. Some nouns do lend themselves for use as collective nouns, but those nouns can be used in other contexts as ordinary, common nouns. Examples:Used as a collective noun: There is a crowd of protestersin front of the building.Used as an ordinary noun: The protesters in front of the building are drawing a crowd.Used as a collective noun: A small school of fishgathered around my ankles.Used as an ordinary noun: I attend a very small school.Used as a collective noun: There is a bench of judges who determine the winning entry.Used as an ordinary noun: I was told to sit on the benchoutside the principal's office and wait to be called.
There are no collective nouns for tomato yet. But use it in the way that fits the way you are talking to someone. For example Box, Bunch, Group, Basket etc.
Since workmen are people, you use an appropriate collective for the context. The most common is crew, but you could also use shift, collective, company, team, etc.
Collective nouns to use for crops are 'a field' or 'a harvest'.