No, a singular collective noun takes a singular verb.
Examples:
The bouquet of flowers is four dollars.
A team of zebras is pulling the wagon.
A choir of singers is rehearsing in the church.
The collective noun is acting individually (one board) and takes a singular verb:"The board was arriving late, trickling in by twos and threes."The fact that the rest of the sentence is referring to the members (plural) does not change the fact that the subject (board) is singular.
When a collective noun is singular, it takes a singular verb.Example: A herd of wildebeest has made this trail to the river.When a collective noun is plural, it takes a plural verb.Example: The herds of wildebeest have made this trail to the river.
When a collective noun is the subject of a sentence or a clause, a singular collective noun takes a verb for the singular; a plural collective noun takes a verb for the plural.Examples:A herd of elephants was at the river's edge. (singular)Herds of elephants were converging at the river's edge. (plural)
Collective nouns do not have an antecedent. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way.A collective noun can be singular or plural; for example:A herd of elephants frequents this water hole.Many herds of animals frequent this water hole.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.An antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces.An antecedent can be singular or plural. The noun that takes its place must agree in number (singular or plural) with the antecedent; for example:An antelope stood by the water. It raised its head to listen.Some antelopes stood by the water. Theyraised their heads to listen.
The raven takes unkindness as its collective noun.
The collective noun is acting individually (one board) and takes a singular verb:"The board was arriving late, trickling in by twos and threes."The fact that the rest of the sentence is referring to the members (plural) does not change the fact that the subject (board) is singular.
plural verb and a plural pronoun
When a collective noun is singular, it takes a singular verb.Example: A herd of wildebeest has made this trail to the river.When a collective noun is plural, it takes a plural verb.Example: The herds of wildebeest have made this trail to the river.
A collective noun is one that indicates a group. It can be a proper noun, such as the Congress of the United States of America or the Supreme Court or New York Yankees, or it may be a simple noun, such as legislature, jury, or team. Other collective nouns: family, majority (as of people), management, workforce, and faculty. Care should be taken when choosing a verb to go with collective nouns. They can take singular or plural nouns, depending on how they are used in the sentence. When the collective noun is thought of as acting as a whole, it should take a singular verb; when the individual members of a group are thought of as acting independently, then use a plural verb. For example: The jury is deliberating. (Acting as a unit, collective noun takes a singular verb) The jury are taking their seats. (Acting as individuals, collective noun takes plural verb) Beware: many readers will be uncomfortable with plural verbs with collective nouns. For example, "The jury are taking their seats" will sound weird to many readers, even though it is grammatically correct. It may be better to write "The jurors are taking their seats" or "The jury members are taking their seats."
When a collective noun is the subject of a sentence or a clause, a singular collective noun takes a verb for the singular; a plural collective noun takes a verb for the plural.Examples:A herd of elephants was at the river's edge. (singular)Herds of elephants were converging at the river's edge. (plural)
The collective noun is acting as a unit and takes a singular verb.
Adnexa, as a collective noun, always takes a plural verb.
everyone is plural Everyone is a type of collective pronoun which takes a singular verb therefore it is third person singular.
rule 1:a singular subject requires a singular verb rule2:a plural subject requires a plural verb rule3:singular indefinite pronouns take singular verbs rule4:plural indefinite pronouns take plural verbs rule5:a collective noun takes a singular verb when the group it names acts as one single unit rule6:a collective noun takes a plural verb when the group it names acts individually rule7:compound subjects joined by"AND" take plural verbs.However ,when these compound subjects are considered one item or reffer to one person or thing, then it requires a singular verb rule8:compound subjects connected by or,nor,either...or and neither...nor,the verb agrees with the nearer subject. rule9:titles,amounts,and measurmaents take singular verbs rule10:plural nouns preceded by"a number of" take plural verbs rule11:plural nouns preceded by"the number of" take singular verbs
A herd of antelope regularly usesthis water hole. (singular)Many herds of animals regularly usethis water hole. (plural)
An example of collective noun and verb disagreement is: "The team is celebrating their victory." In this case, "team" is the collective noun treated as a singular entity, yet the verb "are" is used as if the team is made up of individuals. The correct sentence would be: "The team is celebrating its victory."
Collective nouns do not have an antecedent. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way.A collective noun can be singular or plural; for example:A herd of elephants frequents this water hole.Many herds of animals frequent this water hole.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.An antecedent is the noun that the pronoun replaces.An antecedent can be singular or plural. The noun that takes its place must agree in number (singular or plural) with the antecedent; for example:An antelope stood by the water. It raised its head to listen.Some antelopes stood by the water. Theyraised their heads to listen.