NO. Use "flight of stairs"
No, the standard collective nouns for 'stairs' are:
No it is a flight of stairs.
no, It's "flight of stairs"
flight
Yes
It depends. If you're describing someone who is actually standing on a step or walking up or down the stairs, you would say "on the stairs". If a person were standing in front of the stairs, you could say "at the stairs" or "at the staircase".
The noun 'fleet' is a standard collective noun for:a fleet of aircrafta fleet of planesa fleet of shipsa fleet of taxisa fleet of carsa fleet of lorries (trucks)a fleet of printersa fleet of bassa fleet of cootsa fleet of mud-hensa fleet of pigs
The general collective noun for 'vehicles' is a fleet, for example:a fleet of carsa fleet of taxisa fleet of limosa fleet of trucksa fleet of buses
The collective noun is a fleet of trawlers.
The noun 'fleet' is used as a collective noun for planes, ships, and motor vehicles; for example:a fleet of carsa fleet of taxisa fleet of shipsa fleet of planesa fleet of trucks
Flight of stairs and Fleet of ships.
yes, but it does depend on how long and how many stairs.
No, a long flight of stairs a noisy gaggle of geese
A slinky (of the correct size) can walk down the stairs.
Yes because there are multiple cars in the fleet. Ex) You wouldn't say a fleet of soldier . . . you would say a fleet of soldiers
It depends. If you're describing someone who is actually standing on a step or walking up or down the stairs, you would say "on the stairs". If a person were standing in front of the stairs, you could say "at the stairs" or "at the staircase".
No. A singular subject takes a singular verb: A fleet IS stranded.
The word missing in the sentence is "is". The correct sentence should be "The monster is on the stairs."
Yes
That is correct.
les escaliers (often used in the plural, but also correct in the singular)
It could be. For example: if you are talking to someone and you want both of you to climb some stairs.