No, the noun 'campaign' is not a standard collective noun.
Campaign can be used as a noun and a verb. To be used as a verb you must refer to taking part in a campaign.
The noun head is a common noun when used for the head of a person, animal, or a physical place or thing such as the head of a pin. Head is an abstract noun when used for someone or something that is leading or in front, such as 'head of the class', 'head of the company', or the 'head of the campaign'.
The presidential campaign
The correct spelling of the noun is candidacy (campaign for election).
Yes, the word 'person' is a noun. It is used to refer to an individual human being.
A noun for a person from the noun 'column' is columnist, a person who writes a newspaper column.
from a noun noun- person, place, or thing from a noun noun- person, place, or thing
The noun 'Benjamin' is a concrete noun, the name of a person, a physical person.
Either noun or verb. Example as noun: "Barack Obama's campaign for President of the United States was successful." Example as verb (in its past tense form: "Barack Obama successfully campaigned for the Presidency in 2008."
The noun 'value' is a third person noun, a thing spoken about.
Yes, "person" is a noun. A word functioning as a noun in a sentence typically refers to a person, place, thing, or idea.