The noun 'bevy' is used as a collective noun for:
No, the standard collective noun for 'pupils' is 'a dilation of pupils'.
The standard collective noun for students will also work 'a class of pupils'.
The collective noun 'bevy' is a standard collective noun for:
bevy of beauties
bevy of deer (roe deer)
bevy of doves
bevy of ladies
bevy of larks
bevy of maidens
bevy of otter
bevy of otters
bevy of quail
bevy of swans
The word 'bevy' is a noun; a word for a large group of people or things of a particular kind; a word for a thing.The noun 'bevy' is a standard collective noun for:a bevy of beautiesa bevy of deer (roe deer)a bevy of dovesa bevy of ladiesa bevy of larksa bevy of maidensa bevy of ottera bevy of ottersa bevy of quaila bevy of roe deera bevy of swans
The collective noun is a drift of icebergs.
No, the noun 'kin' is not a collective noun.
A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole. The noun 'salvation' is not commonly a collective noun. However, if a noun such as 'salvation' suits the context of a situation, it can be used as a collective noun. A collective noun is considered a collective noun as a function, not as a definition of the noun. Collective nouns are an informal part of language.
No, the word scienceis not a collective noun. However, any noun can function is as a collective noun in a suitable context without being a designated collective noun.
The collective noun is a bevy of beauties.
The noun 'bevy' is used as a collective noun for:a bevy of beautiesa bevy of deera bevy of dovesa bevy of dowagersa bevy of girlsa bevy of judgesa bevy of ladiesa bevy of larksa bevy of ottersa bevy of partridgesa bevy of quaila bevy of swansa bevy of turtles
The term most used for a group of human girls is a "giggle"
A bevy of girls
The noun beauties is not a collective noun.There is a collective noun to group the word beauties: a bevy of beauties.
Yes, the noun 'bevy' is a standard collective noun for:a bevy of beautiesa bevy of deer (roe deer)a bevy of dovesa bevy of ladiesa bevy of larksa bevy of maidensa bevy of ottera bevy of ottersa bevy of quaila bevy of roe deera bevy of swans
The word 'bevy' is a noun; a word for a large group of people or things of a particular kind; a word for a thing.The noun 'bevy' is a standard collective noun for:a bevy of beautiesa bevy of deer (roe deer)a bevy of dovesa bevy of ladiesa bevy of larksa bevy of maidensa bevy of ottera bevy of ottersa bevy of quaila bevy of roe deera bevy of swans
No, the noun 'school' is the standard collective noun for fish.The noun for 'pupils' is a dilation of pupils (we can assume the word 'pupils' is referring to eyes).When referring to students, the standard collective noun for students will work for pupils as well: a class of pupils.It should be noted that collective nouns are an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun, a 'school of pupils' included.
There is actually one, it took a bit of finding, 'a dilation of pupils'.If you are referring to students, the collective noun for students will also work: a class of pupils.
Bevy is the collective form, as in Bevy of maidens, bevy of otter, bevy of quail, bevy of roe deer, bevy of swans. A bevy is a large group of people or things of a particular kind
Yes, the noun 'school' is an appropriate collective noun for the noun 'girls'. A collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun suitable for the context of a situation can be a collective noun. The standard collective nouns for 'girls' are:a bevy of girlsa giggle of girls
The standard collective noun for 'ladies' is a bevy of ladies.However, a collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can be used, for example:a group of ladiesa queue of ladiesa crowd of ladiesa crew of ladiesa committee of ladiesa staff of ladiesa board of ladiesa team of ladies