A badelynge is an archaic term for a group of ducks on the ground.
a group of ducks
bad-ling
Ducks
DUCK
a badelynge,brace,bunch,flock,a raft, or a team but the best answer 4 a group of geese is a flock
It depends where the ducks are:In flight: flockOn the ground: brace, badling, or sordOn the water: raft, team, or paddlingChicks: brood or clutch
The collective noun for teachers is a faculty of teachers.There are several collective nouns for duck:brace of ducks (applies to birds, in general)flock of ducks (applies to birds on the ground, in general)flight of ducks (applies to birds in the air, in general)badelynge or badlingof ducks (applies to ducks on the ground)paddling of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)raftof ducks (applies to ducks in the water)teamof ducks (applies to ducks in the water)flush of ducks
Yes, the plural noun 'flocks' is a standard collective noun for two or more groups of ducks.The collective nouns for ducks are:brace of ducks (applies to birds, in general)flock of ducks (applies to birds on the ground, in general)flight of ducks (applies to birds in the air, in general)flush of ducks (a brood)badelynge or badling of ducks (applies to ducks on the ground)paddling of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)raft of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)team of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)
No, the standard collective nouns for ducks are:a brace of ducks (applies to birds, in general)a flock of ducks (applies to birds on the ground, in general)a flight of ducks (applies to birds in the air, in general)a badelynge or badling of ducks (applies to ducks on the ground)a paddling of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)a raft of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)a team of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)a flush of ducksThe noun 'battery' is used as a collective noun for:a battery of barracudasa battery of testsa battery of guns.
The most common collective nouns are flock of geese or a gaggle of geese.When geese are in the air they are also referred to as skein, team, wedge or plump of geese.The term plump is only used when the birds are flying in close formation and the term wedge is derived from the V-formation the geese fly in.