The verb 'has' is used with a singular collective noun.Example: The crowd of people has dispersed.
The verb 'have' is used with a plural collective noun.
Example: The crowds of people have dispersed.
The use of collective nouns is to group nouns for like things. The collective noun used to group them adds information about the group, for example a herd of buffaloes or a stampede of buffaloes is more evocative than some buffaloes; a wedge of swans tells us that they are in flight, in formation; a drift of swans tells us that they are quietly gliding across water; a squadron of swans brings to mind the sound of honking and wings flapping. And sometime a collective noun simply describes a group, such as a crowd of people or a line of people.
A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. A plural collective noun is used when referring to two or more groups of people or things; for example:
The verb 'is' is used for singular collective nouns. Example:This bouquet of flowers isfor my mother.The verb 'are' is used for plural collective nouns. Example: These bouquets of flowers are all for the leading lady.
The standard collective noun is a herd of caribou(or caribous, both plural forms are accepted).
Sardine is the singular form; sardines is the plural form.
Neither is a collective noun; relatives is the plural form for the singular relative; representatives is the plural form for the singular representative. A collective noun for relatives is a gathering of relatives. A collective noun for representatives is a committee of representatives.
There is no specific collective noun for "collective nouns." However, I have seen a list of collective nouns and a page of collective nouns.
No one can know for sure how many collective nouns there are. There are several hundred established collective nouns and almost as many fanciful collective nouns that people like to think up. Some collective nouns have become obsolete and new collective nouns are created as society changes. When I got my first office job, there was no such thing as a network of computers, it hadn't been invented yet.
A plural noun represents more than one of something. For example, 'flowers' is plural for 'flower'. Common, proper, abstract and collective nouns can all have plural forms. A collective noun is a singular (not plural) noun that represents a 'group' of things. For example, 'herd' is a collective noun for animals such as sheep and cows. Collective nouns can have plural forms; for example, 'herds' is the plural form of 'herd'.
No, the noun seats is the plural form for the noun seat. A collective noun is a word used to group nouns; the collective noun for seats is a row of seats.
The verb 'is' is used for singular collective nouns. Example:This bouquet of flowers isfor my mother.The verb 'are' is used for plural collective nouns. Example: These bouquets of flowers are all for the leading lady.
An Expectation. (From a compendium of collective nouns by Woop Studios.
The standard collective noun is a herd of caribou(or caribous, both plural forms are accepted).
Collective nouns are words used to group people or things taken together as one whole, such as a crew of workers, a chain of restaurants, or a litter of kittens.Plural nouns are words for more than one person, place, or thing, such as a worker or two workers; one restaurant or three restaurants; and a kitten or four kittens.Collective nouns can be singular or plural; for example, two crews of workers, several chains of restaurants, or the mother has had two litters of kittens.
Sardine is the singular form; sardines is the plural form.
No. Runners is the plural form of runner. A collective noun for runners could be pack -- a pack of runners
No, visitors is not a collective noun. The noun visitors is the plural form for the singular form visitor. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns. Some collective nouns for visitors are a flock of visitors or a stream of visitors.
Absract, Compound, Collective, Proper, Singular, Plural, Concrete, Possesive
Neither is a collective noun; relatives is the plural form for the singular relative; representatives is the plural form for the singular representative. A collective noun for relatives is a gathering of relatives. A collective noun for representatives is a committee of representatives.