Collective nouns for snow are a blanket of snow, a bank of snow, or a drift of snow.
A collective noun that starts with 'd' can be a downfallof snow.
Although the noun 'lot' is not a standard collective noun for a specific group of people or things, the noun 'lot' is used a lot as an informal collective noun; for example, a lot of questions, a lot of trouble, a lot of fun, etc.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'liquor'. However, collective nouns are an informal part of language and any noun suitable for the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a lot of liquor, a flask of liquor, a cache of liquor, etc.
The standard collective nouns are a cache of money, a rouleau of money, a wad of money.
Ladybirds are insects and have no collective noun of their own. You would use a general collective noun like a bunch, a group, a lot or indefinite pronouns like some, a few, etc.
The is no standard collective noun for haggis.Collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun. Some recommendations are 'a heap of haggis' and 'an offal lot of haggis'.
Although the noun 'lot' is not a standard collective noun for a specific group of people or things, the noun 'lot' is used a lot as an informal collective noun; for example, a lot of questions, a lot of trouble, a lot of fun, etc.
Examples of collective nouns are 'a lot of parking attendants' and 'a lot of realtors'.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'liquor'. However, collective nouns are an informal part of language and any noun suitable for the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a lot of liquor, a flask of liquor, a cache of liquor, etc.
The standard collective nouns are a cache of money, a rouleau of money, a wad of money.
Ladybirds are insects and have no collective noun of their own. You would use a general collective noun like a bunch, a group, a lot or indefinite pronouns like some, a few, etc.
The is no standard collective noun for haggis.Collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun. Some recommendations are 'a heap of haggis' and 'an offal lot of haggis'.
The collective nouns are a cache of money, a rouleau of money, a wad of money.The are no collective nouns for money that start with 'fo', however, you can use any noun that fits the context of the sentence, for example a fountain of money, a fortress of money, or a foolishness of money.A synonym for 'a lot of money' is a fortune. The noun fortune is not a collective noun. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way, for example a flock of birds.
A Flock of Birds means a lot of bird flying together
The noun 'favor' is not a collective noun for any group of things. However, I have often heard people say that they had done 'a lot of favors' for someone.
The noun 'wad' is a collective noun for: a wad of bills a wad of money If you have too many bills or a lot of money, the plural noun 'wads' can be used: wads of bills wads of money
The noun 'wad' is a collective noun for: a wad of bills a wad of money If you have too many bills or a lot of money, the plural noun 'wads' can be used: wads of bills wads of money
The standard collective noun for 'salt' is a lot of salt(perhaps a Biblical reference?).Because there is no specific collective noun for salt that we commonly use, the context of your sentence would determine the collective noun to use; for example: a pinch, a box, a shaker, a cup, etc.The noun 'salt' is an uncountable (mass) noun and the nouns used for units of an uncountable noun (pinch, box, cup, etc.) are actually called partitive nouns.