In Beatrix Potter's story, the two bad mice caused mischief by sneaking into a dollhouse and damaging the furniture and belongings inside.
A group of mice is called a "mischief."
a horde, a mischief, or a cluster
A mischief of mice ... yours truly hygenas be crazy baboons - no control teach me how to dougie
A group of mice living in the same place is commonly referred to as a "nest" or a "mischief." Mice often gather in nests for shelter and to raise their young, while "mischief" is a more playful term used to describe a group of them.
Could be known as a plague or a swarm. Rats and mice have their own collective nouns. Rats for example would be a colony, horde, mischief, pack or swarm. Mice are known as a horde, mischief or nest
The correct term for a large number of mice is a "mischief." This term is often used to describe a group of these rodents, highlighting their playful and sometimes troublesome nature. Other collective nouns for mice include "nest" or "horde," but "mischief" is the most commonly recognized.
Population
The collective nouns for 'mouse' are:a plague of micea horde of micea cluster of micea mischief of mice
The collective nouns for 'mice' are:a nest of micea plague of micea horde of micea cluster of micea mischief of mice
A group of mice are called a mischief or nest. A family is called a horde. The male is called a Buck and the female a Doe.A group of mice is commonly referred to as a family, and also as a horde, a mischief, or simply, and most frequently, a nest of mice.Other collective nouns describing mice include a colonyand a harvest. The former is self-explanatory; the latter from the fact mice and other rodents nest in the dry stubble of wheat and other cereal plants following the harvest.A group of baby mice is called a litter.Some might refer to mice, when they are regarded as a pest, as a plague, but this isn't a group (collective) noun as such, it simply illustrates the fact the creatures are a nuisance, as in a plague of cockroaches.
because
yes