Difference between revisions of "Language/French/Grammar/Collective-nouns"

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==Collective Nouns: Definition==
==Collective Nouns: Definition==
 
A collective noun ("nom collectif" in French) is a singular noun that represents a group of things or people.
A collective noun (nom collectif) is a singular noun that represents a group of things or people.  
 


==Subject-Verb Agreement==
==Subject-Verb Agreement==

Revision as of 22:43, 23 November 2021

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Collective nouns in French

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Reminder: Categories of Nouns in French

This video explains the difference between certain categories of nouns that are relevant to your French learning: common and proper nouns, concrete and abstract nouns, countable and uncountable nouns, and collective nouns.

Chapters

  • 0:00 Categories of nouns
  • 0:19 Common/Proper
  • 0:55 Concrete/Abstract
  • 1:28 Countable/Non-countable
  • 2:12 Collective nouns
  • 3:02 Note about categories of nouns
  • 3:19 Recapitulative table

Collective Nouns: Definition

A collective noun ("nom collectif" in French) is a singular noun that represents a group of things or people.

Subject-Verb Agreement

Although collective nouns can stand alone in a sentence, they are often followed by a complement (a group of something). The tricky part about using collective nouns is determining whether the verb should agree with the collective noun (and be singular) or with its complement (and be plural).

Examples of collective nouns

French English
Un archipel (d'îles) An archipelago (of islands)
Un banc (de poissons) A school (of fish)
Un comité A committee
Un cortège (de personnes, de choses) A procession (of people, things)
Un essaim (d'abeilles) A swarm (of bees)
Un gouvernement A government
Un peuple people
Un tas A pile
Une assiette (de légumes) A plate (of vegetables)
Une assistance An audience
Une bande (de jeunes) A bunch (of young people)
Une batterie (de missiles) A battery (of missiles)
Une couvée (de poussins) A brood (of chicks)
Une équipe A team
Une flottille (de pédalos) A flotilla (of pedal boats)
Une foule (de gens) A crowd (of people)
Une harde (de cerfs, de sangliers) A herd (deer, wild boar)
Une main-d'oeuvre  A workforce
Une meute (de chiens, de loups) A pack (of dogs, wolves)
Une pile (d'assiettes) A stack (of plates)
Une poignée A handful or fistful
Une série A series
Une troupe (de soldats, de lions) A troop (of soldiers, of lions)
Une volée (de corbeaux) A flock (of crows)

Collective noun = Subject of a clause

If the collective noun is the subject of a clause, the verb is mostly in the singular. This is different from English, where the verb can be either singular or plural:

  • Le gouvernement a (NOT "ont") décidé d'interdire les cigarettes dans les lieux publics

The government has/have decided to ban cigarettes in public places

  • Notre équipe s'entraîne (NOT "s'entraînent") le mardi soir

Our team trains/train on Tuesday evenings