"Flock" refers to groups of birds/fowl; "fold" is a covered place to keep sheep ("sheepfold").
A fold was an enclosure made of stone and topped with thorn bushes where a flock of sheep was placed at night for protection against predators. The term fold was somewhat bastardized and cooped by Christianity, where a flock was used as an analogy for a congregation. So to "join the fold" was to join the flock in it's protected place, the church. Where they would be protected not from predators but from the evil of temptation and free will. The flock or congregation takes protected shelter in the "fold" which is analogous to the physical church itself.
A fold was an enclosure made of stone and topped with thorn bushes where a flock of sheep was placed at night for protection against predators. The term fold was somewhat bastardized and cooped by Christianity, where a flock was used as an analogy for a congregation. So to "join the fold" was to join the flock in it's protected place, the church. Where they would be protected not from predators but from the evil of temptation and free will. The flock or congregation takes protected shelter in the "fold" which is analogous to the physical church itself.
A fold was an enclosure made of stone and topped with thorn bushes where a flock of sheep was placed at night for protection against predators. The term fold was somewhat bastardized and cooped by Christianity, where a flock was used as an analogy for a congregation. So to "join the fold" was to join the flock in it's protected place, the church. Where they would be protected not from predators but from the evil of temptation and free will. The flock or congregation takes protected shelter in the "fold" which is analogous to the physical church itself.
A fold was an enclosure made of stone and topped with thorn bushes where a flock of sheep was placed at night for protection against predators. The term fold was somewhat bastardized and cooped by Christianity, where a flock was used as an analogy for a congregation. So to "join the fold" was to join the flock in it's protected place, the church. Where they would be protected not from predators but from the evil of temptation and free will. The more correct usage would be "return to" rather than "join the." The flock or congregation takes protected shelter in the "fold" which is analogous to the physical church itself.
Fold line are organisms that produce offsprings of different GENOTYPE from their parents and differ among them. They contribute to SPECIES DIVERSITY.
Fold line are organisms that produce offsprings of different GENOTYPE from their parents and differ among them. They contribute to SPECIES DIVERSITY.
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
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
Collective nouns for sheep are:a flock of sheepa band of sheepa mob of sheepa drift of sheepa down of sheepa drove of sheepa fold of sheepa trip of sheepa hurtle of sheepa herd of sheep
A flock is a group of birds; there is no specific number that a flock represents. Half of a flock is simply "half of a flock"
A flock.
The collective noun is a flock of birds.