Geese is actually the collective term for goose.
The standard collective nouns for geese are 'a flock of geese' or 'a gaggle of geese'. When geese are in the air they are also referred to as skein, team, wedge, or plump of geese. The term plump is only used when the birds are flying in close formation and the term wedge is derived from the V-formation. The collective nouns for grapes are 'a cluster of grapes' and 'a bunch of grapes'. The collective nouns for wolves are 'a pack of wolves' and 'a route (rout) of wolves'.
The correct collective term for a group of crows is a "parliment of crows" whereas a common term for a group of geese would be a "gaggle of geese"
Geese is the plural name for a singular goose.
A gaggle of geese.
The term is a collective noun.For example, the collective noun for a group of cows is a herd.The collective noun for a group of lions is called a pride.The collective noun for a group of geese is called a gaggle.
The collective noun is a gaggle of geese.
No, the word 'geese' is the plural form for the singular noun goose. The collective nouns for geese are:a flock of geesea gaggle of geesea team of geesea trip of geesea skein of geese (in flight)
The most common collective nouns are flock of geese or a gaggle of geese.When geese are in the air they are also referred to as skein, team, wedge or plump of geese.The term plump is only used when the birds are flying in close formation and the term wedge is derived from the V-formation the geese fly in.
Yes, the noun 'gaggle' is a collective noun for a gaggle of geese.
a gaggle
Skein