No, the word orchestra is a common noun. A common noun becomes a proper noun when it's use for the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title, for example The Boston Pops Orchestra.
Yes, the noun orchestra is used as a collective noun for an orchestra of musicians.
No, the noun 'orchestra' is a concretenoun; a word for a physical thing that can be seen and heard.
No, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra is a proper noun, the name of a specific orchestra. All words of a proper noun are capitalized.
The noun 'orchestra' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a group of musicians; a word for a group of people.
The noun 'orchestra' is not a compound noun. A compound noun is a word made of two or more individual words that merge to form a noun with a meaning of its own. The noun 'orchestra' is sometimes used as a collective noun as 'an orchestra of musicians'. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a form of a noun.
No, the noun 'orchestra' is a concrete noun; a word for a group of people (with instruments) that can be seen and heard; a word for a physical group.
The plural form for the singular noun orchestra is orchestras.
Orchestra is a collective noun for a group of musicians.
The noun 'clump' is a standard collective noun for:a clump of freshmena clump of reedsa clump of trees
There is no standard collective nouns for 'instrumentalists', however, the collective noun for musicians will work:a band of instrumentalistsan orchestra of instrumentalists
"The orchestra plays in the park on Sundays."The nouns in the sentence are:orchestra, a singular, common noun (subject of the sentence).park, a singular, common noun (object of the preposition 'in')Sundays, a plural, proper noun (object of the preposition 'on')There is no collective noun in the sentence. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. The word 'orchestra' is sometimes used as a collective noun, for example an orchestra of musicians, but is not used as a collective noun in this sentence. A 'collective noun' is a function of a noun, not a form of a noun.