The Nouns are group and funny
The nouns in your sentence are group, nouns, and sentence.
a noun group is a group of nouns
A group of monkeys is a "troop." For other group nouns ('collective" nouns; nouns of "assemblage") pertaining to animals, see http://www.pubquizhelp.34sp.com/animals/groups.html
A group of Latin nouns are called declensions. Latin was the language of ancient Rome.
There are no collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is determined by its use. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns in a descriptive way. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are often used as collective nouns, but in this sentence they are not. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are not describing anyone.
There are three nouns. People, group, and questions are nouns. Questions is a plural noun.
The noun form for the adjective funny is funniness. A related noun form is funnies, the section of a newspaper containing comic strips.
Nouns
The collective nouns for a group of ravens are:a conspiracy of ravensa constable of ravensa parliament of ravensan unkindness of ravens
All nouns in English are neutral; the word for a group of nouns is a collective noun.Some examples of collective nouns are:a crew of laborersa crowd of peoplea herd of cattlea litter of kittensa grove of treesa bouquet of flowers
Yes, it may be considered one when used with nouns: a group discussion, group effort. However, this is not quite distinct from other nouns which are used as adjuncts (e.g. team, company).
If you mean group name as in collective nouns, then muster, ostentation or pride