Migration.
A group of flying fish out of water is considered a flock. In their natural habitat in water, flying fish typically swim in schools.
"Flock" can be either a verb or a noun. Example as a verb: "Birds of a feather flock together." Example as a noun: "A shepherd watches over a flock of sheep."
The noun 'flock' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of sheep, birds, or followers.The noun 'flock' is also used as a collective noun, for example, a flock of pigeons.The word 'flock' is also a verb: flock, flocks, flocking, flocked.
Flock
A flock is a group of creatures, such as sheep or birds: There is usually a flock of pigeons by the benches in the park where people drop the crumbs from their lunches.
Flock - To congregate, or for a group of people to head to a single point. "When the weather gets hot, people will flock to the only lemonade stand on the beach."
Yes, the noun 'flock' is a standard collective noun for:a flock of birds (any kind)a flock of camelsa flock of dolphinsa flock of ducksa flock of geesea flock of goatsa flock of kangaroosa flock of licea flock of lionsa flock of pigeonsa flock of pigsa flock of seagullsa flock of sheepa flock of tourists
No, the noun 'flock' is a standard collective noun for birds or animals (a flock of seagulls, a flock of sheep).There is no standard collective noun for 'blacksmiths'. Collective nouns are an informal part of language; any noun that suits the context of a situation can function as a collective noun, for example, a shop of blacksmiths, a union of blacksmiths, or a flock of blacksmiths.
The noun 'flock' is a standard collective noun for:a flock of birds (any kind)a flock of camelsa flock of dolphinsa flock of ducksa flock of geesea flock of goatsa flock of kangaroosa flock of licea flock of lionsa flock of pigeonsa flock of pigsa flock of seagullsa flock of sheepa flock of tourists
Pecking order in a flock is an instinctive behavior related to social order. It is also an example of natural selection.
Social organization is achieved through the pecking order behavior in a flock of chickens. It is an example of a dominance hierarchy.
In their native habitat, cockatiels do flock with other cockatiels. This is a natural behaviour which is primarily for defence against larger birds of prey.