A clump of trees, a pile of leaves.
Yes, one of the standard collective nouns for trees is a clump.
The collective noun for palm trees is a grove of palm trees.
The collective noun for cherry trees is a stand of cherry trees (for a few trees) or and orchard of cherry trees(for many trees).
The noun 'clump' is a standard collective noun for:a clump of freshmena clump of reedsa clump of trees
Yes, the noun 'clump' is a standard collective noun for a small group of trees.Some other collective nouns for trees are:a stand of treesa grove of treesan orchard of treesa forest of treesa copse of trees
Collective nouns for a large area of trees are:a forest of treesa grove of treesa thicket of treesA smaller group is a stand of trees, a copse of trees, or a clump of trees.
The standard collective nouns for trees are:a stand of treesa grove of treesan orchard of treesa forest of treesa copse of treesA "forest" is a large number of trees.A "wood" is a slightly smaller number.A "copse" is fewer still.
Yes, a thicket of trees is a perfectly acceptable collective noun.
There is no standard collective noun specifically for pines, however the standard collective nouns for trees can be used:a forest of pinesa stand of pinesa clump of pinesa stillness of pinesa copse of pines
There is no standard collective noun for bamboo trees, however one of the collective nouns for trees may be suitable; they are:a clump of bamboo treesa coupe of bamboo treesa forest of bamboo treesa grove of bamboo treesa stand of bamboo treesa stillness of bamboo treesa thicket of bamboo trees
The collective noun for leaves is a pile of leaves.
Sure, the Jeep crashed into a clump of trees.