Yes, the term a pack of pencils is a collective noun. Other collective nouns are a case of pencils or a gross of pencils.
Actually, Pack can either be a Verb or a Noun. When you pack a box with stuff ... it's a Verb, BUT When you carry a Pack on you back ... it's a Noun.
It can be used as a known it can also be used as a verb, depending on context.
Yes, "pack" can be a verb. It means to put things into a container or to arrange items in a specific way for storage or transport. For example, "I need to pack my suitcase before I leave for vacation."
Yes, the word 'gum' is both a noun (gum, gums) and a verb (gum, gums, gumming, gummed).Examples:I bought a pack of chewing gum. (noun)The glue is gone from the envelope flap, you can gum it with a glue stick. (verb)
A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words merged into one word with a meaning of its own. There are three types of compound nouns:open spaced: tennis shoe, front door, paint brush, bus stophyphenated: mother-in-law, fifty-five, six-pack, part-timeclosed: bathtub, Baseball, houseboat, newspaper, lunchbox
Some collective nouns for pens are a set of pens, a case of pens, a supply or pens.
In the noun phrase 'pack of juice', the noun pack is functioning as a collective noun.
No, it is not a noun so it is not a collective noun. The noun form is cheerleader, but that is not a collective noun.
The collective nouns are a pack of wolves or a rout (route) of wolves.
collective noun of cords is what
My best guess is 'choppers'.
There is no specific collective noun for the noun 'dingo', however, since a dingo is a type of dog, the collective noun for dog, 'pack' will work: a pack of dingoes.
As with a pack of dogs, it is a pack of dingoes (the noun 'pack' is the collective noun).
The collective noun for the noun 'lies' is a pack of lies.
The collective noun for the noun 'lies' is a pack of lies.
No. Runners is the plural form of runner. A collective noun for runners could be pack -- a pack of runners
Wolves IS a plural noun; it refers to 2 or more animals. Maybe you want a collective noun, which is different from a plural noun. Wolves live in packs, and pack would be a collective noun for wolves. A pack is a group of wolves, but pack itself is used as a singular noun. A pack is a single pack, even though it is made up of several wolves.