The noun 'herd' is a common noun, a general word for a group of animals.
The noun 'herd' is a collective noun form some different types of animals, for example, a herd of buffalo, a herd of elephants, a herd of horses, etc.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place or thing, such as Buffalo New York.
No, herd is a noun, a common, collective noun for a group of animals such as a herd of horses. The word heard sounds exactly the same as herd but 'heard' is a verb, the past tense of the verb 'to hear'.
Kenya is a proper noun, as it is the name of a country.
The noun herd is a singular, common, concrete noun, often used as a collective noun for a group of animals such as a herd of cattle, a herd of buffalo, or a herd of antelope.
Collective nouns for buffaloes are a herd of buffaloes, a gang of buffaloes, or a obstinacy of buffaloes. Collective nouns for elephants are a herd of elephants, a parade of elephants, or a memory of elephants.
The standard collective noun is a herd of gazelles.
Yes, the noun 'herd' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of animals, a collective noun (a herd of cattle, a herd of elephants).The word 'herd' is also a verb: herd, herds, herding, herded.
Yes, the noun 'herd' is a standard collective noun for:antelopebisonbuffalocariboucattlecurlewsdeerdonkeyselephantselkgeesegoatshorses (wild)impalaskangaroosmooseporpoisesrabbitsreindeersealsspringbokswanswalruseswhaleswrenszebras
The word 'herd' is a singular, common, collective noun; a word for a group of animals, a thing.
The collective noun is a herd of seahorses.
A herd.
The word England is a proper noun
The noun 'herd' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of animals, a collective noun (a herd of cattle, a herd of elephants).