TRUE
You would make a presentation when you want to 'present' for example showing a group of colleagues about the new product you have designed. You put the info on slides and present it.
No, collaborate is a verb. The noun form is collaboration.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of colleagues.A collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun; for example, a group of colleagues, a team of colleagues, a company of colleagues, etc.
Each page of a PowerPoint Presentation is called a Slide A set of slides that you present to people in a group is called a Presentation
No, the verb is not correct. The subject noun 'group' is singular (one group). The correct sentence is:"Your group is unable to decide on an effective presentation method."
No, the noun 'colleagues' is a plural, common, abstract noun; a word for people who work together or share a common activity together.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole. Example:A group of colleagues put together a farewell party for Jim's retirement.
When you organize and present a project to a group of people
"Women's rights in the 1980s", "women's achievements in the 1980s", "gender gains in the 1980s".
His colleagues in the Vienna Secession group.
Peers, colleagues, crew, hommies, posse, or gang. Those words mean group of friends.
As a teacher, you may be involved in creating lesson plans, designing educational resources, assessing student work, providing feedback, coordinating group projects, and grading assignments and tests. You may also need to conduct research, attend professional development workshops, and collaborate with colleagues on curriculum development.