The little old lady really picked up her pace when she saw the Boy Scout troop!
Some primates gather in what is termed a troop.
The troop of soldiers returned triumphantly after routing the enemy.
The Boy Scouts needed a new leader for the local troop. The US uses satellites to observe troop movements around the world. The senator said he was tired of having reporters troop through his private beach.
the siege of Troy was unbelievable
Must you act like a brigand?
You can use it like the word american, french, English and so forth
The troop disbanded after the accident.
The troop of soldiers returned triumphantly after routing the enemy.
I troop myself
The word 'troop' is not a pronoun. The word 'troop' is a noun, a word for a group of soldiers, or a group of people or animals of a particular kind; a word for a group of people or things.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: A troop of baboons could be heard in the distance. It could not be seen due to the density of the trees. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'troop' in the second sentence)
The troop's courageous efforts inspire everyone. or The troops' courageous efforts inspire everyone.
As a noun, troop has two meanings, one a singular noun and one the more typical group noun. As both refer to people, they are concrete nouns. troop - a group of scouts, or soldiers troop - a single soldier (trooper) -- very rarely used
The tired troop trudged past. We trudged all day through the oppressive heat of the jungle only to find the edge of the desert.
"Shoot the troop of soldiers from the stoop."
When our scout leader resigned, kids lost interest and our troop disbanded.
Troop's
The noun 'troop' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of people or things. The noun 'troop' functions as a collective noun for: a troop of Brownies a troop of dogfish a troop of gorillas a troop of kangaroos a troop of monkeys a troop of soldiers
The word 'troop' is a noun or a verb, not a pronoun. Examples:noun: We'll need at least a dozen sandwiches to feed this troop.verb: Let's meet at ten then we can all troop down to personnel with our grievance.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'troop' is it. Example:The troop will march for two hours, then it will need to rest.Because the noun troop is a group of people, the plural pronouns 'they' and 'them' are also used:The troop will march for two hours, then they will need to rest. At that time we can feed them.