no
No, "achievement" is not a collective noun. It is a singular noun that refers to the act of achieving something or a specific accomplishment. Collective nouns refer to a group of individuals or things considered as a single unit, such as "team" or "flock."
Which act established the district and appeals courts
There are three laws that support collective bargaining. The three laws that support collective bargaining are the national labor relations act, the Taft Hartley act, and the Wagner's act.
A group of people who think of themselves as one and act in history as a unit are typically referred to as a collective, community, or society. They share common goals, values, and beliefs that unite them and drive their actions.
reviewers of fact
Robert Spelman Robertson has written: 'The Local Courts Act and the County Courts Act' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Ontario. County Courts, Courts
In smuggling courts there was no juries just a judge.
Collective nouns can be plural, even when they come together to act as a unit. For example, two teams of players who come to train together, diverse crews of workers that come to work a project together, seasonal flocks of different types of migrating birds who come to rest together on a pond.
Judicial Act of 1789
Vice-admiralty courts were run by officers and did not have juries.
The Wagner Act
It gave him less power over the courts