The compound noun 'collective noun' is a word for a noun used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way.
Some examples of collective nouns are:
A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.
Examples:
A crowd of onlookers blocked the accident scene.
Aunt Alice said I could have one of her litter of kittens.
I'm taking mother a bouquet of flowers.
"The orchestra plays in the park on Sundays."The nouns in the sentence are:orchestra, a singular, common noun (subject of the sentence).park, a singular, common noun (object of the preposition 'in')Sundays, a plural, proper noun (object of the preposition 'on')There is no collective noun in the sentence. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. The word 'orchestra' is sometimes used as a collective noun, for example an orchestra of musicians, but is not used as a collective noun in this sentence. A 'collective noun' is a function of a noun, not a form of a noun.
There are no nouns used as collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a characteristic inherent in a noun The noun 'class' can be a collective noun for 'a class of students', but in this sentence, it is not functioning as a collective noun.
No, the word road is a singular, common, concrete noun, not a collective noun.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole. There is no specific collective noun for the word road, in which case a noun suitable for the context of the sentence is used, for example a network of roads.
The noun community is not a standardized collective noun.A collective noun is an informal part of language and any noun can function as a collective noun in thee context of a given sentence; for example a community of people, a community of artists, a community of academics, etc.
No, the noun 'woman' is not a collective noun.The noun 'woman' is a word for a person, one person.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or imaginative way; for example, a group of women or a crowd of women.
"The orchestra plays in the park on Sundays."The nouns in the sentence are:orchestra, a singular, common noun (subject of the sentence).park, a singular, common noun (object of the preposition 'in')Sundays, a plural, proper noun (object of the preposition 'on')There is no collective noun in the sentence. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. The word 'orchestra' is sometimes used as a collective noun, for example an orchestra of musicians, but is not used as a collective noun in this sentence. A 'collective noun' is a function of a noun, not a form of a noun.
There are no nouns used as collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a characteristic inherent in a noun The noun 'class' can be a collective noun for 'a class of students', but in this sentence, it is not functioning as a collective noun.
No, the word road is a singular, common, concrete noun, not a collective noun.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole. There is no specific collective noun for the word road, in which case a noun suitable for the context of the sentence is used, for example a network of roads.
The noun community is not a standardized collective noun.A collective noun is an informal part of language and any noun can function as a collective noun in thee context of a given sentence; for example a community of people, a community of artists, a community of academics, etc.
No, the noun 'woman' is not a collective noun.The noun 'woman' is a word for a person, one person.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or imaginative way; for example, a group of women or a crowd of women.
The sentence contains no collective nouns. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a characteristic inherent in a noun. The noun committee and the noun board are often used as collective nouns (a committee of members and a board of directors), but not in this sentence.
There are no collective nouns in the sentence. The noun 'family' can be used as a collective noun (a family of artists or a family of gophers), but in this sentence it is not.
The word 'family' is often used as a collective noun, however, in this sentence is is not. The noun family is a collective noun for a family of otters, a family of sardines, a family of beavers, a family of friends, or a family of any other type.
A collective noun functions in a sentence as any noun; as the subject of a sentence or a clause or the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:subject: A family of otters has settled under our house.object: Drew Barrymore is the current generation of a family of actors.
No, the word facts is the plural form for the noun fact; not a collective noun.
The word 'bundle' is a collective noun for the noun papers.
No. The word strength is a noun, but not a collective noun.