If you are looking for nouns that mean a group of people, animals, or things, that describes a collective noun. In fact, the word "group" itself is a collective noun. However, a collective noun can be singular or plural, for example you may have a team of player or several teams of players. Some examples of collective nouns are:
"Group of children" is considered singular because "group" is the main subject of the sentence, while "children" is a descriptive noun modifying the group. So, you would use singular verbs and pronouns when referring to a group of children.
The noun 'team' is a singular noun. The plural form is teams.
The singular possessive form of "baby" is "baby's."
SängerThe same as the singular form
All English nouns ( except possibly the names Jesus and Moses ) form the possessive singular by adding 's: baby's
The noun 'crew' is a singular noun, a word for one group of workers; the plural form is crews.
"Teach" is the singular form of the verb, while "teaches" is the third person singular form. "Teach" can also be used as the plural form when referring to a group of teachers collectively, such as "the teach of the school."
Groups is a noun (plural form of group) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of group).
The possessive form of the singular noun puppy is puppy's.The plural form of the noun puppy is puppies.The plural possessive form is puppies'.Examples:My puppy's name is Max.My puppies' names are Mickey and Minnie.
The noun 'pants' is both the singular and the plural.Pants is from the group of nouns that sound plural, but are in fact singular or plural. This is because the word pants is actually a shortened form of 'a pair of pants' (pair is singular). Other examples from this group are shorts, glasses, binoculars, scissors, etc.
The possessive form of the singular noun person is person's.The possessive form of the plural noun persons is persons'.Examples:Do you know that person's name? (singular)How many persons' names are on the list? (plural)
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.