Yes, the noun 'drove' is used for a group moving from one place to another.The noun 'drove' is a standard collective nounfor:
No, the word 'donkeys' is the plural form for the singular noun donkey. The collective nouns for a group of donkeys are: a drove of donkeys a herd of donkeys a pace of donkeys
The noun 'drove' is used for a group moving from one place to another.The noun 'drove' is a standard collective noun for:a drove of bullocksa drove of cattlea drove of donkeys (or asses)a drove of goatsa drove of haresa drove of hogsa drove of horsesa drove of oxena drove of pigsa drove of rabbitsa drove of sheepa drove of swineand large groups of people that are in motion.
Collective nouns for donkeys are:a herd of donkeysa drove of donkeysa pace of donkeys
No, the word facts is the plural form for the noun fact; not a collective noun.
No. The word strength is a noun, but not a collective noun.
The noun 'drove' is a collective noun for: a drove of asses a drove of cattle a drove of donkeys a drove of goats a drove of hares a drove of horses a drove of oxen a drove of pigs a drove of rabbits a drove of sheep The noun 'shelf' is a collective noun for: a shelf of books
The collective noun is a drove of bullocks.
No, the word 'donkeys' is the plural form for the singular noun donkey. The collective nouns for a group of donkeys are: a drove of donkeys a herd of donkeys a pace of donkeys
The noun 'drove' is used for a group moving from one place to another.The noun 'drove' is a standard collective noun for:a drove of bullocksa drove of cattlea drove of donkeys (or asses)a drove of goatsa drove of haresa drove of hogsa drove of horsesa drove of oxena drove of pigsa drove of rabbitsa drove of sheepa drove of swineand large groups of people that are in motion.
Drove
The collective noun for a group of hares is a drove.
The collective noun for cattle is a herd of cattle. The farmer drove his herd of cattle to the pasture on the hill. Some other collective nouns are a drift, a drove, a kine, a mob, or a team of cattle.
Collective nouns for donkeys are:a herd of donkeysa drove of donkeysa pace of donkeys
No, the word facts is the plural form for the noun fact; not a collective noun.
The word 'bundle' is a collective noun for the noun papers.
No. The word strength is a noun, but not a collective noun.
There is no specific collective noun for the breed Herefords, however, the collective nouns for 'cattle' can be used:a drift of Herefordsa drove of Herefordsa herd of Herefordsa kine of Herefordsa mob of HerefordsNote: The word Hereford as a breed of cattle is a proper noun, a breed named after a specific place. A proper noun is always capitalized.