There are a few words depending on whether you are English or American. The English would say 'cutlery' whilst the Americans may use 'silverware' or 'flatware'. Another English word is 'Canteen' (of cutlery)
Depending on the use of the term there are two answers:
1. Cutleries - meaning the businesses of cutlers (makers/sellers of cutlery)
2. No plural- cutlery is an uncountable noun (a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts), a word for implements for eating food; edged or cutting instruments in general.
The standard collective noun is a set of cutlery
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Cutlery is very vital part of a kitchen. Without cutlery kitchen is just an empty place.
The collective nouns for cutlery are a set of cutlery and a canteen of cutlery .
The collective noun for cutlery is 'a set of cutlery'.
A group of sentences is called a paragraph
A group of spectators are called an audience.
Cutlery is called cutlery because you cut with the cutlery. (Incliding cutting cake with a spoon)
It's a 'Canteen of cutlery'.
cutlery
It may be called a service as we call a set of china a "service for 12" or the like. Some boxes of cutlery are marked "40 piece service for 8" for example. You would expect that box to contain 8 salad forks, 8 dinner forks, 8 knives, 8 soup spoons and 8 teaspoons.
A set of Cutley
A group of knives,forks and spoons is not called cutlery as cutlery is a name exclusive to items that cut, so only knives are classed as cutlery. a more accurate term would probably be dining utensilsYou misunderstand the question. The asker did not mean "What is an amalgamation of knives, forks, and spoons called?" They were asking what it is called when they are merged into one, like a spork.
Plastic cutlery and dinnerware? :')
The noun 'chest' is a collective noun for a chest of cutlery. The noun cutlery doesn't have its own specific collective noun so a noun that fits the context is used, such as a collection of cutlery or a drawer of cutlery.
Americans call cutlery "cutlery."
You can count cutlery, the noun 'cutlery' is an uncountable noun.But you can have one set of cutlery, or two or more sets of cutlery, or many pieces of cutlery, but the noun 'cutlery' itself never takes the plural form.
Cutlery is a correct answer. An additional word would be silverware, but since almost no one uses silver silverware anymore, tableware is probably preferable.
No special name, knife or cutlery dealer.