The collective nouns are a crew of sailors and a choir of singers.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of friends. The noun 'group' is a collective noun in the term 'a group of friends'.
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'news'.
A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive or fanciful way. A collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun, for example, "a heap of news" or "an outpouring of news".
A group of trees is called a grove or a stand.
Birds gathered in the grove of trees.
Weeping willow trees are usually solitary and do not grow in stands or groves.
Poultry is for domestic fowl collectively, chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese and so on
Collective nouns for places are:
There are no collective nouns in the sentence. A collective noun is determined by its use. A collective noun is a word used to group other nouns in a descriptive way.
The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are often used as collective nouns, but in this sentence they are not. The nouns 'group' and 'audience' are not describing anyone.
The collective nouns are a bloat of hippos, a crash of hippos, or a herd of hippos.
There is no specific collective noun for 'comet', most likely because comets are rarely found in groups. However, it is possible to have a cluster or comets, a series of comets, or (as is theorized) a cloud of comets.
The noun bench is used as a collective noun for:
There is not specific collective noun for anteaters, most likely because anteaters are solitary animals. However, if you need a word for a group of anteaters, a noun suitable for the context is used, for example a pair of anteaters, a family of anteaters, etc.
You can not get rid of jellyfish, they have been in the ocean forever. They are here to stay.
There is no exact record of when horses were domesticated. Horses were hunted for centuries, and after that humans began to tame them and keep them in herds, much like cattle. The best estimate is around the years 4000 to 3500 BCE.
The general collective noun for birds is a flock of birds.
Many individual species of birds also have their own collective nouns, for example:
The noun fleet is a standard collective noun for a fleet of ships, a fleet of planes, or a fleet of vehicles of any kind.