group of cows = herd
listened = heard
I couldn't really find the answer, but I came up with several names for a group of cows: drift, drove, herd, mob
A group of cows is called a herd, not a flock. Flocks are a group of birds or sheep. This is just a group of cows.
Twelve cows can be called a flink, a dozen head or a herd of cows.
Cows typically gather in herds rather than flocks. A herd of cows refers to a group of domesticated cattle that travel, feed, and live together. The term "flock" is more commonly used to describe a group of birds or sheep.
Flink is a real-time stream processing framework used for big data applications, while a herd of cows refers to a group of cattle. Flink is a software technology, whereas a herd of cows is a biological grouping of animals. The two are fundamentally different in terms of their nature and purpose.
The homophone for "group" is "grope."
A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another word, but has a different spelling and meaning. In this case, the homophone for herd would be heard. They are spelled differently. Herd is a grouping of animals. Heard is the past tense of hear.
"listened to the tape of the choral group" is the predicate in this sentence. It describes the action that Ms. Bentley and her class performed.
herd, heard
band, banned troop, troupe herd, heard guild, gild knot, not
A group of fish = a school of fish
In my opinion the word for cows and bulls in a group is called a herd.
A group of 3 cows would be called a "herd of cows". It is a very small herd, but it is technically a herd. Anytime you have a group of cattle it is called a herd.
I couldn't really find the answer, but I came up with several names for a group of cows: drift, drove, herd, mob
A herd.
The homophone of "there" is "their." "There" refers to a place or location, while "their" is a pronoun showing possession or belonging to a group of people.
A group of cows is called a herd, not a flock. Flocks are a group of birds or sheep. This is just a group of cows.