A game
a baseball
A game
A game
A crowd is the collective noun for people watching a match. You cannot have a collective noun of watching a match because watching is a verb, not a noun.
The criminal mounted the scaffold, and delivered his last words to the watching crowd.
Collective nouns for people at a football match are a crowd of people, a stadium of people, and sometimes a mob of people. The people playing the match are a teams of players, or teams of footballers.
The noun 'crowd' is a standard collective noun for a crowd of people, a crowd of onlookers.
Yes, the noun 'crowd' is a collective noun as a word for a group.The noun 'crowd' is a standard collective noun for a crowd of people and a crowd of onlookers.The word 'crowd' is also a verb: crowd, crowds, crowding, crowded.
the crowd is unhappy because their team ,the Mudville Nine are losing,the crowd also becomes angered at the umpire because Casey the best player on the team has struck out
A crowd is the collective noun for people watching a match. You cannot have a collective noun of watching a match because watching is a verb, not a noun.
The crowd is watching him as people watch monkeys at a zoo.
Baseball at Mudville - 1917 was released on: USA: May 1917
Spectators, crowd or audience.
The city in the poem "Casey at the Bat" is Mudville. The poem describes the baseball team from Mudville and their star player, Casey, who fails to deliver in a crucial moment.
The Lodger
The word 'watching' is the present participle of the verb to watch (I am watching, they are watching). The present participle of the verb is also an adjective (the watching crowd), and a gerund, a verbal noun. Gerunds are uncountable nouns.
The cast of Baseball at Mudville - 1917 includes: William Hutchinson John Lancaster Lee Morris
He dela like the crowd is watching him
somewhere
Yes; it's in Louisiana, USA