The standard collective noun is: an audience of listeners
The noun 'audience' is a standard collective noun for:audience of listenersaudience of spectators
The collective noun is: a mob of unruly people.
The noun 'queue' is a collective noun for a 'queue of people'.
A collective noun is a noun used for a group of people or things the noun group is a generic collective noun which can be used for anything
audiences Audience is a collective noun. It means it's a group of people so there is no plural form. e.g. The audience was listening to the performance. The sentence is incorrect if you say: The audiences were listening to the performance. All collective nouns MUST have their own plural forms or they are NOT collective: hence, flock and flocks, team and teams, herd and herds, audience and audiences, etc. This rule helps one decide if a noun is collective or not.
The noun 'audience' is a standard collective noun for:audience of listenersaudience of spectators
The collective noun is an audience of people.
The collective noun is: a mob of unruly people.
The noun 'queue' is a collective noun for a 'queue of people'.
A collective noun is a noun used for a group of people or things the noun group is a generic collective noun which can be used for anything
A collective noun for a small group of angry people is a gang of thugs; a collective noun for a large group of angry people is a mob of people.
A collective noun for people that starts with Q is queue.
No, the noun 'event' is not a collective noun. A collective noun is a noun used for a group of people or things; for example, a crowd of people, a litter of puppies, or a pack of gum.
A collective noun is a noun used for a group of people or things.There is only one Superman. A collective noun is not applicable.
audiences Audience is a collective noun. It means it's a group of people so there is no plural form. e.g. The audience was listening to the performance. The sentence is incorrect if you say: The audiences were listening to the performance. All collective nouns MUST have their own plural forms or they are NOT collective: hence, flock and flocks, team and teams, herd and herds, audience and audiences, etc. This rule helps one decide if a noun is collective or not.
The collective noun is an audience of spectators.
The collective noun is an audience of spectators.