A singular word for a group of people or things taken together as one whole is a collective noun; for example, a crowd of people, a flock of birds, a grove of trees, etc.
A collective noun can be plural when there are two or more groups; for example, crowds of people, flocks of birds, groves of trees.
Example: Crowds of people converged in front of the capitol building.
The noun athletics is singular noun, an uncountable noun as a word for games, sports, and exercises requiring strength and skill; a word that encompasses an aggregate group of things.
The word 'family' is a noun, a singular, common noun, a word for a group of people.
The noun 'family' is a singular, common noun:'family' is an abstract noun as a word for a group of related people or things; a word for a concept.'family' is a concrete noun as a word for specific people or things grouped together.
The noun 'crew' is a singular noun, a word for one group of workers; the plural form is crews.
No, it is a simple plural of the word "saint". A collective noun is a word that appears to be singular but actually refers to a group of people, animals, or things. For example, "team" is a collective noun that refers to a group of people, and "herd" is a collective noun that refers to a group of animals.
Group's.
The word group's is singular possessive for the noun group; the apostrophe s indicates that something in the sentence belongs to the group.
The noun athletics is singular noun, an uncountable noun as a word for games, sports, and exercises requiring strength and skill; a word that encompasses an aggregate group of things.
The noun athletics is singular noun, an uncountable noun as a word for games, sports, and exercises requiring strength and skill; a word that encompasses an aggregate group of things.
The noun 'class' is a singular, common noun, a general word for a thing.The common noun 'class' is a concrete noun as a word for:students taught as a group;a group in a competition.The common noun 'class' is an abstract noun as a word for:the period during which a group of students meet;a rank in society;a category of things alike in some way;a skill level.
Its like the word family. It refers to a group of people (plural) but is a the noun personnel is singular.
The noun class is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a group of students taught together; a group in society; a grouping of things; a standard of service. The word class is also a verb: class, classes, classing, classed.
"Group of children" is considered singular because "group" is the main subject of the sentence, while "children" is a descriptive noun modifying the group. So, you would use singular verbs and pronouns when referring to a group of children.
if a word refers to a single item it is singular. if it refers to lots of things it is plural."Potato" is singular "potatoes" is a plural word."mouse" is singular, "mice" is a plural word."person" is singular, "people" is a plural word.
The noun 'family' is a singular, common noun:'family' is an abstract noun as a word for a group of related people or things; a word for a concept.'family' is a concrete noun as a word for specific people or things grouped together.
The noun 'orchestra' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of musicians; a word for a group of people.
The common nouns are group and ladies; the word 'a' is an indefinite article; 'beautiful' is an adjective.The noun group is a singular, common noun; a word for a number of people or things located together or classed together.The noun ladies is a plural, common noun; a word for two or more adult female persons, used in a context of polite and mannerly female persons.ANSWER: There is a common expression, a "bevy" of beauties.The noun bevy is a singular, common, collective noun; a word for a large group of people or things of a particular kind.