Admissions | Accreditation | Booksellers | Catalog | Colleges | Contact Us | Continents/States/Districts | Contracts | Examinations | Forms | Grants | Hostels | Honorary Doctorate degree | Instructors | Lecture | Librarians | Membership | Professional Examinations | Programs | Recommendations | Research Grants | Researchers | Students login | Schools | Search | Seminar | Study Center/Centre | Thesis | Universities | Work counseling |
A collective noun is a noun that is singular in form but refers to a group of people or things. Sometimes they refer to a group of specific things:- For example:-
Sometimes they are more general:- For example:- Groups of people - army, audience, band, choir, class, committee, crew, family, gang, jury, orchestra, police, staff, team, trio Groups of animals - colony, flock, herd, pack, pod, school, swarm Groups of things - bunch, bundle, clump, pair, set, stack When such a group is considered as a single unit, the collective noun is used with a singular verb and singular pronouns. For example - The committee has reached its decision. But when the focus is on the individual members of the group, British English uses a plural verb and plural pronouns. For example - "The committee have been arguing all morning." This is the same as saying "The people in the committe have been ...." A determiner in front of a singular collective noun is always singular: this committee , never these committee (but of course when the collective noun is pluralized, it takes a plural determiner: these committees ). Collective nouns are singular in form but plural in sense. Here are some examples of collective nouns: assembly committee faculty herd audience crew family jury class crowd flock team For purposes of agreement, collective nouns can be singular or plural, depending on how they are used in a sentence. Collective nouns used as one unit take a singular verb; collective nouns that indicate many units take a plural verb. |