A collective noun is a word to group other nouns. An orchestra is usually not in a group of other orchestras. However, the word orchestra is a collective noun for:
No, the word orchestra is a common noun. A common noun becomes a proper noun when it's use for the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title, for example The Boston Pops Orchestra.
Yes, the noun orchestra is used as a collective noun for an orchestra of musicians.
No, the noun 'orchestra' is a concretenoun; a word for a physical thing that can be seen and heard.
No, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra is a proper noun, the name of a specific orchestra. All words of a proper noun are capitalized.
The noun 'orchestra' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of musicians; a word for a group of people.
The noun 'orchestra' is not a compound noun. A compound noun is a word made of two or more individual words that merge to form a noun with a meaning of its own. The noun 'orchestra' is sometimes used as a collective noun as 'an orchestra of musicians'. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a form of a noun.
No, the noun 'orchestra' is a concrete noun; a word for a group of people (with instruments) that can be seen and heard; a word for a physical group.
The plural form for the singular noun orchestra is orchestras.
Orchestra is a collective noun for a group of musicians.
The noun 'clump' is a standard collective noun for:a clump of freshmena clump of reedsa clump of trees
Noun forms of the verb to collect are collector, collection, and the gerund, collecting.
There is no standard collective nouns for 'instrumentalists', however, the collective noun for musicians will work:a band of instrumentalistsan orchestra of instrumentalists