The standard collective nouns for feathers are:
The collective noun 'tuft' is used for a tuft of grass or a tuft of fur.
Yes, the noun 'fur' is a common noun, a general word for thick coat of soft hair covering the skin of a mammal; a general word for something made from this covering of a mammal.
fur is animal skin with the hair on it that was hunted
There are collective nouns for different types of lawbreakers (a band of robbers, a gang of hoodlums, a den of thieves, etc.), but no collective noun specifically for the word lawbreakers. However, when there is no specific collective noun, any suitable noun can be used, such as a lair of lawbreakers, a disgrace of lawbreakers, an arrogance of lawbreakers...
Yes, the word 'brushes' is a common noun, the plural form of the noun 'brush', a general word for an instrument with bristles or wire used to smooth hair, fur, or fibers; or to clean surfaces.The word 'brushes' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to brush.
The collective noun 'tuft' is used for a tuft of grass or a tuft of fur.
No, they are mammals, therefore they have fur/hair.
they are fur,feather,hair and scale.
Parrot is to feathers as bear is to fur.
Yes, the noun 'fur' is a common noun, a general word for thick coat of soft hair covering the skin of a mammal; a general word for something made from this covering of a mammal.
no not one at all In fact, they have feathers which is made a similar material to fur and hair but it's not really fur. Young birds will typically have a down feather which is similar to fur but is a feather and will grow feathers when they grow up
The platypus has fur, not feathers.
Fur is the hair of animals,hair is our hair.
Thermoregulation
It seems strange, but horses do have feathers. There are on the back of the lower leg to absorb water! They are not the type of feathers that a bird would have, but a type of hair.
A starfish has neither fur or hair. It is an exoskeleton animal, which has its skeleton outside its body.
A Yorkie has hair, not fur.