A group of people moving along together is often referred to as a "crowd," "gathering," or "procession," depending on the context. If they are moving with a common purpose or direction, they might also be called a "mob" or "caravan." In more organized scenarios, terms like "delegation" or "team" could apply.
A group of persons moving along in an orderly line is a queue.
Procession is a group of people, vehicles, or objects moving along in an orderly, formal manner.
It is procession.
Everyone getting along and working together.
The noun 'drove' is a neuter noun, a word for a large group of people or animals moving together. The noun 'drove' is not a word for the people or the animals, it's a word for the group.
Groupie.
A group of people that do an experiment together
A caravan is a group of people traveling together.
A large number of people together is called a crowd or a group.
Ojibwe has no general term for a team, instead being more specific about how many people and what the "team" is doing:aanzawaadagaa means to swim in a groupbagamiba`iwe means to arrive running in a groupbimiba`idi means to run along together in a groupgwej is specifically a group of 10 peoplemidaaso-niizhwewaanagizi is a group of 12 peoplenaanoba`idi is to run together in a group of 5 peopleniiwoba`idi is to run together in a group of 4 peopleniizhooba`idi is to run together in a group of 2 peopleningodwaakozi means to be a group of 100 peoplenisoba`idi means to run together in a group of 3 people
an ethnic group comes together when many people of the same religion join together to form an ethnic group.
A group is when you have a number of people or things together. In order for it to be a group it has to be 3 or more.