The noun 'company' is used as a collective noun for:
There is no standard collective noun for the noun companies, in which case a noun suitable for the situation is used, for example a family of companies, a group of companies, a conglomerate of companies, etc.The noun 'company' is used as a standard collective noun for:a company of actorsa company of angelfisha company of archer fisha company of finchesa company of molesa company of parrotsa company of soldiersa company of widgeon
The noun 'company' is used as a collective noun for:a company of actorsa company of angel fisha company of archer fisha company of finchesa company of molesa company of parrotsa company of soldiersa company of widgeon (a type of duck)
The noun phrase "hounds pack" is technically correct, the plural noun "hounds" describes the noun "pack". A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun (or noun adjunct).A more common way to express the noun phrase is to use the noun "pack" as a collective noun: a pack of hounds.
The collective noun is a "murder" of crows. Others are a "storytelling", a "hover" and a "parcel".
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'.
That is correct. Company is the singular noun, and company's is the singular possessive.
The correct spelling is Tupperware, a proper noun, the name of a specific company and product. A proper noun is always capitalized.
The correct verb form depends on whether the company name is singular or plural. The verb form should agree with the noun.
The correct spelling of the proper noun is Thomas Sabo, a jewelry company based in Nuremberg.
The correct plural form of the noun company is companies.The correct plural possessive form is companies'.Examples:The company's logo is a registered trademark. (singular possessive)All companies' safety rules must be prominently posted. (plural possessive)
The correct spelling of the proper noun is Chrysler (a US car company and NYC building).
The word 'correct' is not a noun; correct is a verb (correct, corrects, correcting, corrected) and an adjective (correct, more correct, most correct). The noun form for the verb to correct is corector, correction, and the gerund, correcting. The noun form for the adjective correct is correctness.
That is the correct spelling of the programming term "hub site." (The proper noun, a company, is one word HubSite.)
It is not correct to say it exactly that way, but it would be correct to say, "We warmly welcome you to our company." In this case, "warmly" is an adverb modifying "welcome" used as a verb. It would also be correct to say, "We would like to extend a warm welcome to our company." In this case, "warm" is an adjective modifying "welcome" used as a noun.
The noun parents is the correct plural form for the singular noun parent.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun companies, in which case a noun suitable for the situation is used, for example a family of companies, a group of companies, a conglomerate of companies, etc.The noun 'company' is used as a standard collective noun for:a company of actorsa company of angelfisha company of archer fisha company of finchesa company of molesa company of parrotsa company of soldiersa company of widgeon
The correct abstract noun for "thief" is "theft."