In Vietnamese you have classifiers. We have a few in English. A tube of tootpaste is an example. Collective nouns indicate a group of something. For example, a flock of birds. A group of lions is called a pride. It is the English collective noun that I am looking for. For more information see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_noun
The answer to my question 1. is 1. A pride of lions. The answer to 4. is very strange!
Its fun to see these threads take on a life of their very own!
I'm very very much unfamiliar with the existance of collective nouns in English and honestly I dont know the answer for any of your quests in the quiz so... if no internet allowed -..- I don't think I can participate... But if you do allow a little research I might have a few right answers... So I'm sorry Tricky42 but you've got my curiosity in this and I'm gonna google kk...
I think you'll have to Google it. Our collective nouns are almost equivalent in number to the nouns to which they are associated.
I think they are pointless because they are affected, out of date but also quaint.
ops.. this is a funny game. is it still going on?
1. A pride of Lions
2. A herd of Geese (flying)
3. A flock of Geese (waddling)
4. A herd of Crows
6. A group of People
7. A sheet of Paper
8. A pride of Horses
9. A herd of Whales
10. A flock of Seagulls
ok?