I don't think so. The way to check for collective nouns is, I believe, to see what verb conjugation comes after it. You say "the children are" just as you say "they are". If children were collective, you would say "the children is". An example of a collective noun is family. You say "the family is".
No, "children" is a plural noun referring to more than one child. A collective noun is a singular noun that represents a group of individuals, such as "family" or "team".
A 'litter'.
The collective nouns are a fleet of ships or an armada of ships.
The noun parliament is a collective noun for:a parliament of beggarsa parliament of crowsa parliament of owlsa parliament of ravensa parliament of rooks
The collective noun 'congregation' is a word for a group of people attending a religious service or the membership of a church or parish.
Some nouns for the collective noun 'fleet' are: cars, ships, and airplanes.
No, the collective nouns for whales are:a pod of whalesa school of whalesa shoal of whalesa gam of whales
marathon
There are so many nouns for horses like Haras, stud, herd, string, field, mews, mob, parcel, rag, slate, set, team, stable.
The noun children is a plural, common noun, concrete noun.
Yes, "children" is a noun. It is a plural form of "child" and refers to young human beings.
"Children" is a common noun for the Boxcar Children.
"Children" is a plural noun. The singular form is "child."