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Troops is plural. Troop is singular.
They were untrained and inexperienced in troop movement. (Much bigger problems awaited him on the return journey.)
The Sioux Indians were tired of living on new reservations created by the US government. They wanted to return to their old way of life where they had freedom, plenty of game to hunt, and were not being constantly watched, as they were in 1890, by US troops. When the Sioux, led by Chief Big Foot, began doing a Ghost Dance to bring their old lifestyles back, the US troops found it threatening, so they began a defensive massacre which ended with 300 Sioux deaths and 25 troop deaths.
Who did Japanese troop occupy to st up a puppet state in1932
As the American Revolutionary War progressed, George Washington had too concerns about troop help from France. His first concern was that France would not send enough troops to help the Americans. His other concern was ironical. He was concerned that France would send so many troops over to America, that France might be tempted to replace the British as "rulers" of the Americans.
No, they are not called either a herd or a pack. A group of monkeys is called a troop.
troops
The plural form for the noun troop is troops.The possessive form for the plural noun troops is troops'.Example: The troops' banners identified each unit in the parade.
The plural form of the noun 'troop' is troops.
As a noun, troop has two meanings, one a singular noun and one the more typical group noun. As both refer to people, they are concrete nouns. troop - a group of scouts, or soldiers troop - a single soldier (trooper) -- very rarely used
Troops
A group of Girl Scouts is called a troop or a group. When a troop or group is split into smaller groups, they are called "patrols".
A troop is a group.
troop
A group of any kind of monkeys is called a 'troop.'
Troops is plural. Troop is singular.
There is no specific collective noun for troops, in which case, a general collective noun that is appropriate for the situation is used, such as an array of troops, a convergence of troops, an alliance of troops, etc. The noun troop itself is a collective noun for a troop of soldiers or a troop of monkeys, in addition to the alternate spelling, a collective noun for a troupe of actors or a troupe of acrobats.