The collective noun is a troop of soldiers.
Other collective nouns for soldiers are:
A company of soldiers
A division of soldiers
A muster of soldiers
A phalanx of soldiers
A platoon of soldiers
A troop of soldiers
A squad of soldiers
An army of soldiers
A brigade of soldiers
The collective noun is a cavalcade of horsemen or a cavalcade of horsewomen.
Cavalry
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.
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 for police is a posse of police.There is no standard collective noun for a group of paramedics.
There is no standard collective noun for police cars.The standard collective noun for police is a posse of police.The standard collective noun for cars is a fleet of cars.When there is no specific collective noun, any noun that suits the situation can be used, for example a chase of police cars, a procession of police cars, a swarm of police cars, etc.
A police officer once told me, it's "hicket". A thicket is sometimes also known as a copse.
No, the noun 'police' is an aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts. The word 'police' is an uncountable noun with no singular form.
The noun 'police' is an aggregatenoun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts. The word 'police' is an uncountable noun with no singular form.
There is no standard collective noun for police cars.The standard collective noun for police is a posse of police.The standard collective noun for cars is a fleet of cars.When there is no specific collective noun, any noun that suits the situation can be used, for example a chase of police cars, a procession of police cars, a swarm of police cars, etc.
The noun 'squad' is a standard collective noun for:a squad of fire fightersa squad of policea squad of soldiersa squad of beaters
No. Police can be a verb (to keep order, to watch) or a collective noun for law enforcement personnel.The noun can be used as a noun adjunct with other nouns, e.g. police officer, police car.
The collective nouns for policemen are a squad of policemen and a posse of policemen.
A police officer once told me, it's "hicket". A thicket is sometimes also known as a copse.
Shoal is a collective noun. It is the collective noun for fish. A shoal of fish.The collective noun is a mint of candies
The collective nouns are:a mess of officersan execution of officersa gaggle of officers (military)a posse of officers (police)