The collective nouns for flowers are a bouquet of flowers and field of flowers. The term 'valley of flowers' is more of a description, but if it suits what you're trying to convey, use it and call it what you will.
The collective noun is a bouquet of flowers.
Bunch or bouquet is a collective noun for a handful of flowers. Arrangement can be used for flowers in a container.
The collective nouns for flowers in a garden are a patch of flowers and a bed of flowers.However, since collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun, for example, a garden of flowers.
The noun 'bouquet' is a collective noun for a 'bouquet of flowers'.
The noun 'spray' is sometimes used as a collective noun for 'a spray of flowers' or 'a spray of roses'.
The collective noun is a bouquet of flowers.
The collective noun is a bouquet of flowers.
Bunch or bouquet is a collective noun for a handful of flowers. Arrangement can be used for flowers in a container.
A bouquet of flowers
The collective nouns for flowers in a garden are a patch of flowers and a bed of flowers.However, since collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun, for example, a garden of flowers.
The noun 'bouquet' is a collective noun for a 'bouquet of flowers'.
The noun 'spray' is sometimes used as a collective noun for 'a spray of flowers' or 'a spray of roses'.
It is a 'bouquet of flowers'. A 'bunch of flowers' is also a noun that could be used.
There is no standard collective noun for lotuses (or Lotuses).The standard collective noun for flowers can be used: a bouquet of lotusesThe standard collective noun for cars can be used: a fleet of Lotuses
No, the word attitude is not a collective noun; attitude is a singular noun, common, abstract noun. A collective noun names a group of things such as a bouquet of flowers or a pair of shoes.A collective noun for attitudes is a range of attitudes.
No, comb is the collective noun for honey. A bunch or a hand are the collective nouns for bananas.
There is no specific collective noun for the noun 'halo', in which case, a noun suitable for the situation can be used, for example 'a stack of halos' or 'a halo of flowers'.