A collective noun for shopkeepers is a "staff" or "clerk." This term refers to a group of individuals working in a shop or store. It is used to collectively describe the employees who assist customers and manage the operations of the establishment.
There is no specific collective nouns for genres of literature, plays, movies, etc. listed. However, if a group of these genres are expressed as a collective noun, any noun suitable for the situation is used; for example:a season of dramasa slate of thrillersa bill of comediesa series of romancesa book of horrorsNote: There is a play by the name of "A Comedy of Errors" by William Shakespeare and a musical comedy by the name of "Little Shop of Horrors" by composer Alan Menken and writer Howard Ashman. These are excellent examples of collective nouns.
Bcose colloquially in India the term used is Liquor shop like in UK its called off license shop, in some parts of Australia its called packaged shop...
Industrial
they worked at a bycicle shop called the Wright they worked at a bycicle shop called the Wright they worked at a bycicle shop called the Wright they worked at a bicycle building and repair shop called The Wright Cycle exchange then changed it to Wright Cycle compare
florist store.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'shop houses'. However, a collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a row of shop houses, a block of shop houses, a street of shop houses, etc.
No, a shop name is not a collective noun. A shop name is a proper noun, the name of a specific thing.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or thing in a descriptive way; for example a chain of McDonald's.
In your example, jar of sweets, is the collective noun; other collective nouns are a box of sweets, a tin of sweets, or a shop of sweets.
No, the noun 'flock' is a standard collective noun for birds or animals (a flock of seagulls, a flock of sheep).There is no standard collective noun for 'blacksmiths'. Collective nouns are an informal part of language; any noun that suits the context of a situation can function as a collective noun, for example, a shop of blacksmiths, a union of blacksmiths, or a flock of blacksmiths.
There is no specific collective noun for spectacles. Use the collective noun appropriate for the situation; for example a display of spectacles (in a shop), a collection of spectacles (in a drawer), a spectrum of spectacles (in an alliteration or a poem), etc.
They sell you things.
Why not? It IS their shop.
Merchants are more like dealers (importers) of tea. Shop keepers bought the tea from the merchants, and sold the tea on to the public.
I think that men were the shop keepers because gals watched the house
It's a common noun, unless you're referring to an actual place called "Pizza Shop"
food
There is no specific collective noun for the noun shop, in which case use a noun suitable for the context; for example a row of shops, a chain of shops, a neighborhood of shops, etc.