The noun 'pride' is a standard collective noun for:
lion
The standard use of the collective noun 'classes' is 'classes of students'. The noun 'class' (or the plural form 'classes') is a general collective noun for people or things, for example 'classes of travelers' or 'classes of work animals'.
The noun 'population' is a singular, common noun; a word for all the inhabitants of a particular place; a community of animals or plants of a particular type in a particular place. The noun 'population' is not a collective noun for any specific group of people or things, however, it is a word that lends itself to use as a collective noun in an appropriate situation.
A collective noun is a noun used for a group of people or things. The noun 'group' is a generic collective noun which can be used for anything.The only standard collective noun use of the noun 'group' is a group of guinea pigs.
The noun 'year' can be used as a collective noun, for example a year of unexpected events, a year of disasters, etc. A noun used as a collective noun is not an inherent quality of the noun, a collective noun is determined by the use of the noun. We use the noun 'bunch' as a collective noun, a bunch of grapes, a bunch of bananas; but "He stuffed his jacket in a bunch into his locker." is not using 'bunch' as a collective noun, it is simply the object of the preposition 'in'; or the example of a table of contents, and "Put the books on the table.", one use of the noun 'table' is a collective noun and one is not. It is true that some nouns lend themselves to use as a collective noun and some are so commonly used as to be the accepted as the standard as a collective noun. Simply, a collective noun is a noun used to group two or more people or things in a descriptive way.
There is no specific collective noun for pages, in which case a collective noun suitable for the situation is used a sheaf of pages (borrowed from a sheaf of papers), a book of pages, or in a theater setting, a staff of pages.
The standard use of the collective noun 'classes' is 'classes of students'. The noun 'class' (or the plural form 'classes') is a general collective noun for people or things, for example 'classes of travelers' or 'classes of work animals'.
The noun 'population' is a singular, common noun; a word for all the inhabitants of a particular place; a community of animals or plants of a particular type in a particular place. The noun 'population' is not a collective noun for any specific group of people or things, however, it is a word that lends itself to use as a collective noun in an appropriate situation.
The noun 'population' is a singular, common noun; a word for all the inhabitants of a particular place; a community of animals or plants of a particular type in a particular place. The noun 'population' is not a collective noun for any specific group of people or things, however, it is a word that lends itself to use as a collective noun in an appropriate situation.
A collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun. In the noun phrase 'a chest of cutlery', the noun 'chest' is functioning as a collective noun. The standard collective noun is 'a set of cutlery'.
A collective noun is a noun used for a group of people or things. The noun 'group' is a generic collective noun which can be used for anything.The only standard collective noun use of the noun 'group' is a group of guinea pigs.
The noun 'year' can be used as a collective noun, for example a year of unexpected events, a year of disasters, etc. A noun used as a collective noun is not an inherent quality of the noun, a collective noun is determined by the use of the noun. We use the noun 'bunch' as a collective noun, a bunch of grapes, a bunch of bananas; but "He stuffed his jacket in a bunch into his locker." is not using 'bunch' as a collective noun, it is simply the object of the preposition 'in'; or the example of a table of contents, and "Put the books on the table.", one use of the noun 'table' is a collective noun and one is not. It is true that some nouns lend themselves to use as a collective noun and some are so commonly used as to be the accepted as the standard as a collective noun. Simply, a collective noun is a noun used to group two or more people or things in a descriptive way.
A spot of leopards would work. Collective nouns are not set in concrete; any noun suitable for the context can be used as a collective noun. A noun is not inherently a collective noun; a noun is determined to be a collective noun by its use in grouping people or things. The standard collective nouns for leopards are a leap of leopards (also spelled 'leep' or 'lepe') and a keep of leopards.
An alternate collective noun for 'dust' is a layer of dust.
There is no specific collective noun for pages, in which case a collective noun suitable for the situation is used a sheaf of pages (borrowed from a sheaf of papers), a book of pages, or in a theater setting, a staff of pages.
The collective noun 'staff' is used for a staff of workers or a staff of employees.
Yes, the word 'loaves' is a collective noun for loaves of bread.
Since the compound noun 'flying saucers' has no collective noun of its own, you can borrow the collective noun for planes: a fleet of flying saucers. You could borrow the collective noun for dishes (saucers): a set of flying saucers. Or, you can use a word of your own choosing. When a noun becomes commonly used as a collective noun for something, that noun becomes 'the' collective noun for that noun.