I love you, English as my second language, but you cray cray and I ain’t doing all of that.
Yeah all of these can be replaced with “group” with no loss in specificity.
Pretty much. There’s no need to learn all these terms. When in doubt, just call the animal group a group. No one is going to care otherwise.
I’m Ojibway/Cree from northern Ontario in Canada
In English - a group of moose is just ‘a group of moose’ … as far as I know, I’ve never heard of meese or mooses … or else people just say two moose, three moose, four moose, etc.
In Ojibway/Cree - one moose is ‘moose’, because moose is an indigenous word … a group of moose in my language is MOOSUK
Very interesting, thanks for sharing. Just curious, is -uk just a general suffix to make anything plural, or this is just a one off thing here?
Yes it is for most words.
Goose is niska … the plural is niskuk
Beaver is amisk… the plural is amiskuk
It’s not a hard rule but it applies to many things, objects and animals.
Ah thanks, that would explain seeing -uk in so many name places I guess
Misread it as trump of baboons
Still works
How could they leave out a Murder of Crows?
No doubt! Only the best group name ever.
We are all a rookery of crookery penguins on this blessed day.
Who decides stuff like this? Who’s like “hmm, yeah a group of owls is definitely a parliament”
What’s the collective noun for a group of politicians?
I thought it was a congress of baboons, but apparently that was a joke that has been circulated for a while now that everyone just accepted as fact.
A Parliament.
- A sanatorium
- A circus
- A gaggle
Why are ferrets a business? Just what are they up to?
I don’t know if it is still in print but there is a book that is a collection of collective nouns. The book is called An Exaltation of Larks by James Lipton.
It is the same James Lipton who hosts the Inside the Actors Studio.
a flight of dragons
a wing of dragons
a doom of dragons
A pandemonium of parrots. 😂
Crap, the thing was deleted. That’s sad, it was nice
The image isn’t working now
“Hey look, it’s a bunch of [insert animal here]” is so much simpler.