"Today I picked a bunch of daisies growing on the side of the road."
Bunch
a bunch of humungus gaints stepped down on to earth to invade McDonalds.
The comedian told a bunch of ludicrous jokes.
Another leek fell out of my bunch of leeks.
I just glutted my appetite by eating a bunch of food.
I have a collective identity because I have a bunch of friends at school.
Stop acting like a bunch of primates! Aren't gorillas primates?
I saw a bunch of ambulances going down the road today.
The painting was drawn solely using stippled spots. This word means a mark made up of a bunch of smaller marks.
The collective noun 'bunch' is used for:a bunch of bananasa bunch of deera bunch of ducks (on water)a bunch of flowersa bunch of grapesa bunch of keysa bunch of sealsa bunch of waterfowla bunch of wigeona bunch of wildfowla bunch of worms
No, the word 'of' is not a pronoun of any kind. The word 'of' is a preposition, a word that shows the relationship between a noun or a pronoun and another word in the sentence. Example:He brought her a bunch of flowers. (the preposition 'of' shows the relationship between the noun 'flowers' and the noun 'bunch')A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence, for example:John is her son. He brought her a bunch of flowers. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'John' in the second sentence)
Endocrine is a word meaning glands that secrete hormones into the blood. A good sentence would be, her endocrine levels were off so she had to go through a whole bunch of tests.