No, the word soldiers is the plural form for the singular noun soldier. Some collective nouns for soldiers are:
A platoon, a company, a brigade, a division, a squad, a troop, a battalion or a boast
A collective noun is a squad of soldiers.
Yes, the noun regiment is a collective noun for a regiment of flamingos.
The noun regiment is a collective noun for:a regiment of flamingosa regiment of soldiers
The word battalion is a collective noun for a battalion of soldiers or a battalion of photographers.
Soldiers
The collective noun starting with 're' is a regiment of soldiers.
The collective noun for a group of soldiers could be: Platoon of soldiers. Troop of soldiers. Patrol of soldiers. Squad of soldiers.
A collective noun is a squad of soldiers.
The collective noun for soldiers that starts with S is squad.
Yes, the noun regiment is a collective noun for a regiment of flamingos.
The noun regiment is a collective noun for:a regiment of flamingosa regiment of soldiers
The word battalion is a collective noun for a battalion of soldiers or a battalion of photographers.
Soldiers
A collective noun for a 'formation of fighting units' (that is 4000/5000 troops), a brigade of soldiers.
A company of soldiers is the answer you're looking for.
The noun 'clump' is a standard collective noun for:a clump of freshmena clump of reedsa clump of trees
There is no specific collective noun for the noun guerillas. A collective noun for a similar group can be used, such as a troop of guerillas (a troop of soldiers) or a gang of guerillas (a gang of hoodlums), depending on your opinion of guerillas.