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.
There are several collective nouns for a group of ducks:
brace of ducks (applies to birds, in general)
flock of ducks (applies to birds on the ground, in general)
flight of ducks (applies to birds in the air, in general)
flush of ducks (a brood)
badelynge or badling of ducks (applies to ducks on the ground)
paddling of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)
raft of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)
team of ducks (applies to ducks in the water)
There are several collective terms for a flock (ooh, there's one already) of geese.They are:
flock or gaggle are the most common and well known terms. When in the air they are also referred to as skein, team, wedge, plump.
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 geeses fly in.
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)
Skein
The sentence contains no collective nouns. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a characteristic inherent in a noun. The noun committee and the noun board are often used as collective nouns (a committee of members and a board of directors), but not in this sentence.
No, the noun 'states' is the plural form of the singular noun 'state'.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way, for example, a staff of employees, a flock of geese, a bouquet of flowers, etc.
No, the noun 'heavens' is not a collective noun.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or fanciful way; for example, a crowd of people, a herd of cattle, a bouquet of flowers, etc.
Yes, the noun 'gaggle' is a collective noun for a gaggle of geese.
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)
Gaggle is a verb and a noun.The verb gaggle is to make a noise characteristic of a goose; to cackle.The noun gaggle is a word for a flock of geese when not in flight; a disorderly or noisy group of people.
Skein
The collective noun for geese is a skein (but that is true only when they are in flight. When on the ground they are termed a gaggle.)
The noun 'gaggle' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a collective noun as a word for a flock of geese; a word for a thing.
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 sentence contains no collective nouns. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a characteristic inherent in a noun. The noun committee and the noun board are often used as collective nouns (a committee of members and a board of directors), but not in this sentence.
There are no collective nouns in the sentence. The noun 'family' can be used as a collective noun (a family of artists or a family of gophers), but in this sentence it is not.
If by 'numerology' you really mean the 'collective noun' for dragonflies, e.g. flock of sheep or gaggle of geese, then the collective noun for dragonflies is a cluster or flight.
There are no nouns used as collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a characteristic inherent in a noun The noun 'class' can be a collective noun for 'a class of students', but in this sentence, it is not functioning as a collective noun.