Why do you say: a herd of cows and a flock of goats? Can goats also fly? ;)
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- anton_maximovApril 2019
GIVE ANSWERS
nmesomtoChukwuApril 2019 That looked like a joke. If so, good one. Anyway, "herd" and "flock" are just collective nouns. |
exRangerJanuary 2020 Right: Such words as "flock", "herd", "pod", "brace", "riot", "gaggle", "school", and several others are "collective nouns" used to define "groupings", or "collections", of various flora and (more typically) fauna (ie, animals).
bensonalan1957January 2020 Collective nouns make no sense and most English speakers don’t know them. A murder of crows. I think some joker just made them up in the past and they got stuck in English |
cbrookie2000January 2020 Honestly most native English speakers couldn't tell you. Even though this may not always be correct, herds usually refer to land animals, flocks usually refer to birds, and for fish you would say a school of fish. But more often than not, you wouldn't actually use those terms in day to day conversation. |