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There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'shop houses'. However, a collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a row of shop houses, a block of shop houses, a street of shop houses, etc.
The word 'houses' is both a noun (house, houses) and a verb (house, houses, housing, housed).Example:The houses on this street were built in the 1940s. (noun)This building houses the biology department and the labs. (verb)
Most commonly it is a noun, as in, "There are four houses on this block." It can also be a verb meaning "provides a place for" as in, "This compartment houses the generator."
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The collective noun for 'houses' is a huddle of houses.The noun 'house' is a collective noun for a house of senators.
The plural of house is houses.
A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.A collective noun is not used for a singular noun such as 'boat'.The standard collective noun for boats is a flotilla of boats.
Yes it is. The plural would be houses.
Separation. "There is a separation between the houses."
Some collective nouns for a group of houses are:a row of housesa tract of housea settlement of houses
The possessive form of the plural noun houses is houses'.Example: Not all of the houses' numbers were visible from the street.
The noun 'house' is a count noun.A count noun is a noun that has a singular and a plural form.The plural form of the singular noun 'house' is 'houses'.