The standard collective nouns for buffalo are:
Note: Both 'buffalo' and 'buffaloes' are accepted plural forms.
There are three accepted plural forms of the noun buffalo:
Examples:
The farmer stood beside his massive buffalo.
The buffalo follow instinctive migration routes.
The buffalos follow instinctive migration routes.
the buffaloes follow instinctive migration routes.
The form 'buffalo' is used as the plural form as an uncountable noun.
Example: We saw a herd of buffalo in the distance.
The forms 'buffalos' and 'buffaloes' are also accepted plurals.
Examples:
We saw a herd of buffalos in the distance.
We saw a herd of buffaloes in the distance.
The plural form of gruffalo ( a mammal belonging to the family Hominidae Homininae) is gruffalos
For more information on these mis-understood creatures, please check out the related link below.
Buffalo
gang
Herd
brood
The collective nouns for buffalo are:a herd of buffaloesa gang of buffaloan obstinacy of buffaloesNote: Both 'buffalo' and 'buffaloes' are accepted plural forms.
Shoal is a collective noun. It is the collective noun for fish. A shoal of fish.The collective noun is a mint of candies
No, the noun farm is not a collective noun.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of reflections. The noun 'reflection' is not a standard collective noun.
No, the noun lumber is not used as a collective noun. The collective noun for lumber is a stack of lumber.
Collective nouns for buffaloes are a herd of buffaloes, a gang of buffaloes, or a obstinacy of buffaloes. Collective nouns for elephants are a herd of elephants, a parade of elephants, or a memory of elephants.
The collective noun for carabao (a type of water buffalo) is a herd of carabao.
The noun Buffalo (capital B) is a proper noun, the name of a specific place.The noun buffalo (lower case b) is a common noun, a general word for a type of mammal.The noun Buffalo and the noun buffalo are concrete nouns, a word for a physical place and a noun for a physical thing.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole.The collective noun for the common noun buffalo is a herd of buffalo.
The collective nouns for buffalo are:a herd of buffaloesa gang of buffaloan obstinacy of buffaloesNote: Both 'buffalo' and 'buffaloes' are accepted plural forms.
A collective noun and its prepositional phrase functions as a noun phrase (a word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun without a verb) that can function as a subject of a sentence or a clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.For example: a herd (collective noun) of buffalo (preposition and object of the preposition)The rule: a singular collective noun (herd) takes a verb for a singular subject (a herd was), and a plural collective noun takes a verb for a plural subject (the herds were).Subject of the sentence: A herd of buffalo slowly moved across the plain.Subject of the clause: The amazing sight, a herd of buffalo grazing, compelled us to stop and watch.Object of the verb: We watched the herd of buffalo from the safety of our car.Object of the preposition: We took photos of the herd of buffalo.
The standard collective nouns for buffalo are:a herd of buffaloa gang of buffaloesan obstinacy of buffaloNote: Both 'buffalo' and 'buffaloes' are accepted plural forms.
A collective noun and its prepositional phrase is a noun phrase (a word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun without a verb). A noun phrase functions the same as a noun as a subject of a sentence or a clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.For example:a herd of buffaloherd is the collective nounof is a prepositionbuffalo is the object of the preposition 'of'The verb is determined by the collective noun itself; a singular collective noun (herd) takes a verb for a singular subject (a herd was), and a plural collective noun takes a verb for a plural subject (the herds were).EXAMPLES of use in sentencesSubject of the sentence: A herd of buffaloslowly moved across the plain.Subject of the clause: The amazing sight, a herd of buffalo grazing, compelled us to stop and watch.Object of the verb: We watched the herd of buffalo from the safety of our car.Object of the preposition: We took photos of the herd of buffalo.
No, the noun 'births' is not a collective noun. The noun 'births' is the plural form of the noun birth, a word for the occasion or the process of an offspring's emergence from the body of its mother.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way, for example a crowd of people, a herd of buffalo, a bouquet of flowers.
Shoal is a collective noun. It is the collective noun for fish. A shoal of fish.The collective noun is a mint of candies
The noun herd is a singular, common, concrete noun, often used as a collective noun for a group of animals such as a herd of cattle, a herd of buffalo, or a herd of antelope.
No, the noun farm is not a collective noun.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of reflections. The noun 'reflection' is not a standard collective noun.