Kangaroos may be referred to most commonly in mobs. However they may also come in troops, or courts (least common).
No, kangaroos is a common, concrete noun, the plural form of the singular kangaroo. A collective noun is a word for a group of things; the collective nouns for kangaroos are a troop of kangaroos or a mob of kangaroos.
The collective noun for kangaroos is a mob, troop, or court. Kangaroos are often colloquially referred to as roos. Male kangaroos are called bucks, boomers, jacks, or old men; females are does, flyers, or jills, and the young ones are joeys.
Forests, is the collective term for groups of treed vegetation.
The collective term for a group of tortoises is a "creep."
The collective nouns for kangaroos are:a troop of kangaroosa mob of kangaroosa herd of kangaroosThere is a misconception that a small group of kangaroos is called a court. "Court" has no reference at all to a group or collection of kangaroos. A "kangaroo court" is quite different, and refers to sham legal proceedings where the outcome is decided more or less in advance, regardless of witnesses and the appearance of genuine proceedings.
They can be, although the term "troop" is not generally used. Kangaroos live and travel in mobs, herds or troops. The most common term is "mob".
Geese is actually the collective term for goose.
Kangaroos are called joeys because it is a term used to refer to baby kangaroos. Just like how we call baby humans "babies," baby kangaroos are called joeys.
Collective Term stands for a group of objects, people, or thing as a basic unit.
The collective term for a group of ferrets is a "a business of ferrets" or "a cast of ferrets".
The noun perianth is a collective term for all the petals and sepals.
The collective term for caterpillars is an army of caterpillars.