The collective nouns for hornets are a "swarm" or a "nest" of hornets.
The collective noun is a "murder" of crows. Others are a "storytelling", a "hover" and a "parcel".
No, the word 'we' is a pronoun, a word that takes the pace of a noun in a sentence.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.Example collective nouns:a crowd of people (the noun 'crowd' groups the people)a mob of people (the noun 'mob' groups unruly people)a nest of hornets (the noun 'nest' groups the hornets)a swarm of hornets (the noun 'swarm' groups hornets in flight)a bushel of apples (the noun 'bushel' groups picked apples)an orchard of apples (the noun 'orchard' groups apples growing on trees)The pronoun 'we' is the first person, plural, subjective, personal pronoun; a word that takes the place of a noun for the speaker and one or more other people as the subject of a sentence or a clause.Examples for the pronoun we:My family is taking a vacation. We are going to the beach. (the pronoun 'we' takes the place of the noun 'family' as the subject of the second sentence)You and I can finish this if we work together. (the pronoun 'we' takes the place of the compound subject 'you and I' as the subject of the second part of the compound sentence)
A 'bunch of trees' is a correct noun phrase.The standard collective noun phrases for a group of trees are:a stand of treesa grove of treesan orchard of treesa forest of treesa copse of treesA collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun, such as 'bunch'.
The collective noun is a drift of icebergs.
The compound, proper noun 'United Nations' is a singularnoun, a word for one organization.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things is a descriptive way.A collective noun is an informal part of language, any noun that suits the context of a situation can function as a collective noun. The noun 'United Nations' will work as a collective noun, for example, a United Nations of students or a United Nations of music, etc. (meaning students or music from all over the world).
Either a swarm or a nest
No, the noun 'fury' is not a standard collective noun. A collective noun is an informal part of language, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun. Some examples of the noun 'fury' as a collective noun are a fury of protesters, a fury of hornets, a fury of professional wrestlers, etc.
The collective nouns for hornets are a "swarm" or a "nest" of hornets.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of postcards.A suitable collective noun is a collection of postcards.
The standard collective noun for 'minstrels' is a troupe of minstrels.
Yes, a thicket of trees is a perfectly acceptable collective noun.
The collective noun is a "murder" of crows. Others are a "storytelling", a "hover" and a "parcel".
No, comb is the collective noun for honey. A bunch or a hand are the collective nouns for bananas.
Yes, the noun 'school' is an appropriate collective noun for the noun 'girls'. A collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun suitable for the context of a situation can be a collective noun. The standard collective nouns for 'girls' are:a bevy of girlsa giggle of girls
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'news'.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or fanciful way. A collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun, for example, "a note of news", "a heap of news", or "an outpouring of news".
A flush of poos is the correct answer.
an apocalypse of robots! M Mortimore