No, the word 'dancers' is a noun, the plural form for the noun dancer; a word for a person who dances or whose profession is dancing; a word for a person.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun dancers are they as a subject and them as an object. Examples:
Are they ready? The dancers are on next.
The dancers are ready. I saw them waiting backstage.
You can say:"The group (of dancers) was highly recommended." or"The dancers were highly recommended."Alternatively you can say "The groups (of dancers) were highly recommended."EXPLANATIONGroup is a singular collective noun. e.g. A group of dancers.The pronoun for a group, or the group, is 'it'. Therefore -> It (the group) was highly recommended.Dancers is plural. The pronoun for 'dancers' is 'they'. Therefore ->They (the dancers) were highly recommended.'Groups' is also plural. So 'They (the groups) were recommended' would be correct.------------------------------------But the question is talking about a group (of dancers). It is easy to make the mistake of thinking about 'the group of dancers' as a plural noun phrase, but 'the group' is clearly a singular collective noun, so the verb takes the third person singular form. i.e. he, she, it was...So the correct grammar is: 'The group of dancers was highly recommended.'
The collective nouns for dancers are a company of dancers or a troupe of dancers. They can be called a company of Morris dancers or a troupe of Morris dancers.
it would be dancers if it is in between the and leapt man put a on lol im board
Example predicate nouns for 'The dancers seemed...':The dancers seemed a vision in pink.The dancers seemed forest animals darting between the trees.The dancers seemed perfect ladies and gentlemen.The dancers seemed well trained athletes.
singular: dancer singular possessive: dancer's plural: dancers plural possessive: dancers'
You can say:"The group (of dancers) was highly recommended." or"The dancers were highly recommended."Alternatively you can say "The groups (of dancers) were highly recommended."EXPLANATIONGroup is a singular collective noun. e.g. A group of dancers.The pronoun for a group, or the group, is 'it'. Therefore -> It (the group) was highly recommended.Dancers is plural. The pronoun for 'dancers' is 'they'. Therefore ->They (the dancers) were highly recommended.'Groups' is also plural. So 'They (the groups) were recommended' would be correct.------------------------------------But the question is talking about a group (of dancers). It is easy to make the mistake of thinking about 'the group of dancers' as a plural noun phrase, but 'the group' is clearly a singular collective noun, so the verb takes the third person singular form. i.e. he, she, it was...So the correct grammar is: 'The group of dancers was highly recommended.'
The collective nouns for dancers are a company of dancers or a troupe of dancers. They can be called a company of Morris dancers or a troupe of Morris dancers.
A group of dancers are called a troupe
dancers from the Netherlands
it would be dancers if it is in between the and leapt man put a on lol im board
Sticky dancers, picky dancers, tricky cancers, tricky dancers.
The collective nouns for a group of dancers are a troupe of dancers or a company of dancers. The word for people in general who are dancing is dancers.
Example predicate nouns for 'The dancers seemed...':The dancers seemed a vision in pink.The dancers seemed forest animals darting between the trees.The dancers seemed perfect ladies and gentlemen.The dancers seemed well trained athletes.
The possessive form for the plural noun dancers is dancers'.
dancers can dance because they practice
A crew is a team of dancers.
A group of dancers are called a troupe