No, the word 'farm' is not a collective noun, farm is a singular, common noun. A collective noun is a word to group nouns for people or things, such as a crowd of people or a herd of cattle. Some collective nouns for farms are a cooperative of farms or even a collective of farms.
There is no specific collective noun for "collective nouns." However, I have seen a list of collective nouns and a page of collective nouns.
The collective noun is a drift of icebergs.
Shallows is a collective noun.
An interesting question, but I'm not sure what region(s) you are referring to. In the United States, consumerism and governmental propaganda caused people to view the collective farming system with distaste- it was considered "un-American" to have no profit motive. In the Soviet Union, this question would greatly depend on the time period. During the Stalin era, collective farmers were put under enormous pressure to produce more crops than was actually possible. If the collective farmers failed to report massive increases in crop production, they (and possibly their families) would be killed, tortured indefinitely, or sent to the Gulag (slave labor camps, similar to concentration camps, in Siberia). However, following Premier Khrushchev's de-Stalinization campaigns, collective farms became much more hospitable. Although life on the collective farm was not exactly a Socialist paradise, it was far better than life under Stalin. Some people loved their lives on the collective farms in the 1960s; others did not enjoy the lifestyle. There are many examples of utopian attempts to create a collective farming system; however, many failed because of greed, which proves to be a very hard drive to erase completely. Following the Cuban Revolution, many people wanted to live on collective farms to help one another; others did not, because they simply were not interested by agriculture. Thus, the answer to your question varies depending on time period and region. Some people did want to live on collective farms, and others did not. I hope this helped.
No, the noun farm is not a collective noun.
Only to the extent that a collective farm may or may not include a livestock farm. Most livestock farms are not part of a collective farm, though.
Collective Farm
Collective nouns to use for crops are 'a field' or 'a harvest'.
No, the word 'farm' is not a collective noun, farm is a singular, common noun. A collective noun is a word to group nouns for people or things, such as a crowd of people or a herd of cattle. Some collective nouns for farms are a cooperative of farms or even a collective of farms.
A collective farm is where several farmers work as a joint enterprise. Collective farms are mostly found in Communist countries because they are supervised by the state.
it help poor people.all poor country need collective farm
Farm owned by the hovernment
kibbutz
A collective farm is one in which several farmers join together and run a joint farm. They are very common in western Europe. They are not very common in the US but some can be found in the northern Great Plains.
A "collective" is a single farm that has been made up of several nearby individual farms. There were two types of collectives. The "kolkhoz" which was a collective farm where the land was owned by the government but operated by the farmers themselves as they saw fit provided they met their quotas of crops. The second was the "sovkhoz" which was a collective farm where the land was owned by the government, the farmers were paid employees and the operation of the farm was in the hands of other government employees.
well people say its the oasis