No. The correct term is a pod of dolphins.
No, "troop of elephant" is not correct. The correct term is "herd of elephants." "Troop" is typically used to refer to groups of monkeys or certain other animals, while "herd" is the appropriate collective noun for elephants.
squad
Dolphins do not live in a school. Fish do. Dolphins "grouping" are called pods.:D
yes, correct.
It is flight of
You probably mean "How, or in what way are dolphins unique," not "why." The correct answer to Why are dolphins are unique is: There is nothing exactly like them. Whether that is actually true is not relevant. As for How are dolphins unique, the answer requires detailed discussion of marine mammal taxonomy.
The noun 'troop' is a collective noun for:a troop of apesa troop of artillerya troop of baboonsa troop of boy scoutsa troop of cavalrya troop of dogfisha troop of foxesa troop of giraffesa troop of horsesa troop of kangaroosa troop of lemursa troop of lionsa troop of monkeysa troop of mushroomsa troop of soldiers
Yes, the noun 'troop' is a collective noun, for example:a troop of Browniesa troop of dogfisha troop of gorillasa troop of kangaroosa troop of monkeysa troop of soldiers
The noun 'troop' is a standard collective noun for:a troop of Browniesa troop of dogfisha troop of gorillasa troop of kangaroosa troop of monkeysa troop of soldiers
Good I am improving this answer, and the correct word would be well in this instance. Just Saying.
A group of baboons can be called a congress. Sorry, this is a fallacy started by a chain email a few years ago, the correct collective noun for Baboons is a troop. Partially correct: a group of baboons can be EITHER a troop or a CONGRESS ! Yes it is called a congress!
The noun 'troop' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of people or things. The noun 'troop' functions as a collective noun for: a troop of Brownies a troop of dogfish a troop of gorillas a troop of kangaroos a troop of monkeys a troop of soldiers