Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Collective nouns + activity task

Definition: Names a group or unit. Collective nouns may be either common or proper.
Examples: United States, congress, faculty, department, audience, team, crowd, herd, army, airforce, navy, police, people, majority, minority, council, company, jury, family, committee, society, public, school, crew, swarm, shoal, cattle and flock.

Each noun from the list above is a single thing. That thing, however, is made up of more than one person. You cannot have a committee, team, or family of one; you need at least two people who compose the unit.

Collective nouns can be either singular or plural, depending on context. But how do you tell if a collective noun is singular or plural? What verbs and pronouns do you use with the collective noun?

Here is the key: Imagine a flock of pigeons pecking at birdseed on the ground. Suddenly, a cat races out of the bushes. What do the pigeons do? They fly off as a unit in an attempt to escape the predator, wheeling through the sky in the same direction.

People often behave in the same manner, doing one thing in unison with the other members of their group. If these people are part of a collective noun, that noun becomes singular and requires singular verbs and pronouns.

As you read the following examples, notice that all members of the collective noun are doing the same thing at the same time:

1)Every afternoon the baseball team follows its coach out to the hot field for practice.
Team = singular; follows = a singular verb; its = a singular pronoun. All members of the team arrive at the same place at the same time.

2)Today, Dr. Ribley's class takes its first 100-item exam.
Class = singular; takes = a singular verb; its = a singular pronoun. All members of the class are testing at the same time.

3)The jury agrees that the state prosecutors did not provide enough evidence, so its verdict is not guilty.
Jury = singular; agrees = a singular verb; its = a singular pronoun. All members of the jury are thinking the same way.

Now imagine three house cats in the living room. Are the cats doing the same thing at the same time? Not this group! One cat might be sleeping on top of the warm television. Another might be grooming on the sofa. A third animal might be perched on the windowsill, watching the world outside. There is one group of animals, but the members of that group are all doing their own thing.

Members of collective nouns can behave in a similar fashion. If the members are acting as individuals, the collective noun is plural and requires plural verbs and pronouns. As you read these examples, notice that the members of the collective noun are not acting in unison:

1)After the three-hour practice under the brutal sun, the team shower, change into their street clothes, and head to their air-conditioned homes.
Team = plural; shower, change, head = plural verbs; their = a plural pronoun. The teammates are dressing into their individual outfits and leaving in different directions for their individual homes.

2)After the long exam, the class start their research papers on famous mathematicians.
Class = plural; start = a plural verb; their = a plural pronoun. The students are beginning their own research papers—in different places, at different times, on different mathematicians.

3)The jury disagree about the guilt of the accused and have told the judge that they are hopelessly deadlocked.
Jury = plural; disagree, have told = plural verbs; they = a plural pronoun. Not everyone on the jury is thinking the same way.


Whenever you cannot decide if a collective noun is singular or plural, exercise your options as a writer. You have two ways that you can compose the sentence without causing an agreement error:
1) insert the word members after the collective noun [jury members, committee members, board members], or
2) use an entirely different word [players instead of team, students instead of class, soldiers instead of army]. Then you can use plural verbs and pronouns without worrying about making mistakes or sounding unnatural.

Now, I'd like you to compose 6 sentences using 6 collective nouns. Use 3 collective nouns as singular and another 3 as plural.

10 comments:

  1. Singular
    1. A team of professional doctors graduated from Queensland University.
    2. Police is working hard to stop the criminals in our city.
    3. A flock of birds flys towards South for winter.

    Plural:
    1. Police officers trying hard to stop the crime in our city.
    2. Professional doctors are serving the public in Australia.
    3. The birds in that flock look beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
  2. *The army trains the new soldiers very well.
    *The family is going shopping this weekind.
    *The class is going to finish next week.

    *The members of crew did a good job in the airplane.
    *The department members are going to have many different decration during Christmas times.
    *The groups of jury make their own decitions by their different opinions.

    ReplyDelete
  3. 1.police is trying to catch the murder.
    2.policemen are trying to catch the criminal.
    3.The team is working hard to achieve its
    goal.
    4.The teammembers are trying to find some
    information from newspaper.
    5.This department only sells kid's cloth.
    6.There are a lot of department stores on this
    street.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The example of singular Collective Noun
    01.The police of Queensland is trying much harder to stop the criminals.
    02.The crowd was making a lot of sound.
    03.My family is quiet good for me to live with
    The Example of Plural Collective Noun
    01.The Commitee members of our villages are really neutral to everybody
    02.My classmates came ahead to help me when I fell down at the ground.
    03.The Team players of Brisbane Lions are working severe to win the next match.
    mansur
    03

    ReplyDelete
  5. Army is training together navy and airforce every year.
    Our class went to computer room.
    Cattle of duck is following its mother on queue.

    Crowd spread after President speech ending.
    Audience thought their angle were different each other.
    People spend lots of money to buy their house.

    ReplyDelete
  6. 1. The plice officer is coming in the area to check the case.
    2. My family is living in Queeta city in Pakistan.
    3. All the studends of our class are doing the test.
    4. All the members of the Brisbane football team came to visit their friends.
    5. The troops of the USA army withdraw from Iraq.
    6. Some people in pakistan need help urgently nowadays.

    ReplyDelete
  7. 1.I played with my team yesterday,against of other team.
    2.Around the world police wants to stop the criminals.
    3.In my country army is so powerful more than police.
    1.There are more people staying in same area.
    2.The team players are doing well than before.
    3.The committ mumbers did not solve this problem.

    ReplyDelete
  8. 1.Army usually works in dengerous place.
    2.Our family lives in Japan.
    3.Our class studies English at the room3.

    1.

    ReplyDelete
  9. 1.Japanese soccoer team menbers, they come from different city.
    2.Police officers are working very hard.
    3.Some people don't eat meat.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Yuki if you use plural possessive pronouns like "our" then the form of sentence will be changed. e.g in your second example the correct sentence will be: Our families live in Japan.
    That's because you are writing about two different families who do different things.

    ReplyDelete