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No, the noun 'France' is a singular, concrete, proper noun; the name of a specific place. The noun 'France' is not a word for a group, it's a word for a place.

A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or fanciful way.

Some nouns are by definition collective nouns such as crowd, herd, or bouquet, words for groups. Some nouns can sometimes function as collective nouns or not: "Please set the table." (not a collective noun) or "a table of contents" (a collective noun). And some nouns are used as collective nouns because people like the way they sound or the way they color the image of a group; for example, "a stand of flamingos" and "a flamboyance of flamingos". Both are standard collective nouns for flamingos.

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Q: Is France a collective noun
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