Yes, "bunch" is a correct collective noun for bananas. It refers to a group of bananas that are attached together, typically found hanging from a banana plant. Other terms like "hand" can also describe a group of bananas, but "bunch" is the most commonly used.
Collective nouns for bananas:a cluster of bananas (on the tree)a bunch of bananasa hand of bananas
A 'bunch of trees' is a correct noun phrase.The standard collective noun phrases for a group of trees are:a stand of treesa grove of treesan orchard of treesa forest of treesa copse of treesA collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun, such as 'bunch'.
Bunch
The collective noun 'bunch' is used for:a bunch of bananasa bunch of deera bunch of ducks (on water)a bunch of flowersa bunch of grapesa bunch of keysa bunch of sealsa bunch of waterfowla bunch of wigeona bunch of wildfowla bunch of worms
The collective noun is a "murder" of crows. Others are a "storytelling", a "hover" and a "parcel".
No, comb is the collective noun for honey. A bunch or a hand are the collective nouns for bananas.
Collective nouns for bananas:a cluster of bananas (on the tree)a bunch of bananasa hand of bananas
Yes, you can use bunch.
A 'bunch of trees' is a correct noun phrase.The standard collective noun phrases for a group of trees are:a stand of treesa grove of treesan orchard of treesa forest of treesa copse of treesA collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun, such as 'bunch'.
Yes, the noun 'bunch' is a standard collective noun for:a bunch of bananasa bunch of deera bunch of ducks (on water)a bunch of flowersa bunch of grapesa bunch of keysa bunch of sealsa bunch of waterfowla bunch of wigeona bunch of wildfowla bunch of worms
Branches is the collective noun of itself.
The noun 'bunch' is standard collective noun for:a bunch of bananasa bunch of deera bunch of ducks (on water)a bunch of flowersa bunch of grapesa bunch of keysa bunch of sealsa bunch of waterfowla bunch of wigeona bunch of wildfowla bunch of worms
Yes, the noun 'bunch' is a standard collective noun for:a bunch of bananasa bunch of deera bunch of ducks (on water)a bunch of flowersa bunch of grapesa bunch of keysa bunch of sealsa bunch of waterfowla bunch of wigeona bunch of wildfowla bunch of worms
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The noun 'year' can be used as a collective noun, for example a year of unexpected events, a year of disasters, etc. A noun used as a collective noun is not an inherent quality of the noun, a collective noun is determined by the use of the noun. We use the noun 'bunch' as a collective noun, a bunch of grapes, a bunch of bananas; but "He stuffed his jacket in a bunch into his locker." is not using 'bunch' as a collective noun, it is simply the object of the preposition 'in'; or the example of a table of contents, and "Put the books on the table.", one use of the noun 'table' is a collective noun and one is not. It is true that some nouns lend themselves to use as a collective noun and some are so commonly used as to be the accepted as the standard as a collective noun. Simply, a collective noun is a noun used to group two or more people or things in a descriptive way.