fbpx
Wikipedia

Collective noun

In linguistics, a collective noun is a word referring to a collection of things taken as a whole. Most collective nouns in everyday speech are not specific to one kind of thing.[citation needed] For example, the collective noun "group" can be applied to people ("a group of people"), or dogs ("a group of dogs"), or objects ("a group of stones").

Some collective nouns are specific to one kind of thing, especially terms of venery, which identify groups of specific animals. For example, "pride" as a term of venery always refers to lions, never to dogs or cows. Other examples come from popular culture such as a group of owls, which is called a "parliament".[1]

Different forms of English handle verb agreement with collective count nouns differently. For example, users of British English generally accept that collective nouns take either singular or plural verb forms depending on context and the metonymic shift that it implies.

Derivation

Morphological derivation accounts for many collective words and various languages have common affixes for denoting collective nouns. Because derivation is a slower and less productive word formation process than the more overtly syntactical morphological methods, there are fewer collectives formed this way. As with all derived words, derivational collectives often differ semantically from the original words, acquiring new connotations and even new denotations.

Affixes

Proto-Indo-European

Early Proto-Indo-European used the suffix *eh₂ to form collective nouns, which evolved into the Latin neuter plural ending -a. Late Proto-Indo-European used the ending *t, which evolved into the English ending -th, as in "youth".

English

The English endings -age and -ade often signify a collective. Sometimes, the relationship is easily recognizable: baggage, drainage, blockade. Though the etymology is plain to see, the derived words take on a distinct meaning. This is a productive ending, as evidenced in the recent coin, "signage".

German

German uses the prefix ge- to create collectives. The root word often undergoes umlaut and suffixation as well as receiving the ge- prefix. Nearly all nouns created in that way are of neuter gender:

  • das Gebirge, "group of hills, mountain range" < der Berg, "mountain" or "hill"
  • das Gepäck, "luggage, baggage" < der Pack, "pack, bundle, pile"
  • das Geflügel, "poultry, fowl (birds)" < late MHG gevlügel(e), under the influence of der Flügel, "wing" < MHG gevügel < OHG gifugili = collective formation of fogal, "bird"
  • das Gefieder, "plumage" < die Feder, "feather"
  • das Geschwisterkind, "sibling" < die Schwester, "sister"
  • die Geschwister, "siblings" < die Schwester, "sister"
  • "Der Gebirgszug" and "die Bergkette" also mean "mountain range", drawing on the words "der Zug" = train, and "die Kette" = chain.

There are also several endings that can be used to create collectives, such as "welt" and "masse".

Dutch

Dutch has a similar pattern but sometimes uses the (unproductive) circumfix ge- -te:[2]

  • berg 'mountain' > gebergte 'mountain range'
  • been 'bone' > gebeente 'skeleton'
  • vogel 'bird' > gevogelte 'poultry'
  • blad 'leaf' > gebladerte 'foliage'

Swedish

The following Swedish example has different words in the collective form and in the individual form:

  • An individual mosquito is a mygga (plural: myggor), but mosquitos as a collective is mygg.

Esperanto

Esperanto uses the collective infix -ar- to produce a large number of derived words:

  • monto 'mountain' > montaro 'mountain range'
  • birdo 'bird' > birdaro 'flock'
  • arbo 'tree' > arbaro 'forest'
  • ŝipo 'ship' > ŝiparo 'fleet'
  • manĝilo 'eating utensil' > manĝilaro 'silverware', 'cutlery'

Metonymic merging of grammatical number

Two examples of collective nouns are "team" and "government", which are both words referring to groups of (usually) people. Both "team" and "government" are countable nouns (consider: "one team", "two teams", "most teams"; "one government", "two governments", "many governments").

Agreement in different forms of English

Confusion often stems from the way that different forms of English handle agreement with collective nouns—specifically, whether or not to use the collective singular: the singular verb form with a collective noun. The plural verb forms are often used in British English with the singular forms of these countable nouns (e.g., "The team have finished the project."). Conversely, in the English language as a whole, singular verb forms can often be used with nouns ending in "-s" that were once considered plural (e.g., "Physics is my favorite academic subject"). This apparent "number mismatch" is a natural and logical feature of human language, and its mechanism is a subtle metonymic shift in the concepts underlying the words.

In British English, it is generally accepted that collective nouns can take either singular or plural verb forms depending on the context and the metonymic shift that it implies. For example, "the team is in the dressing room" (formal agreement) refers to the team as an ensemble, while "the team are fighting among themselves" (notional agreement) refers to the team as individuals. That is also the British English practice with names of countries and cities in sports contexts (e.g., "Newcastle have won the competition.").

In American English, collective nouns almost always take singular verb forms (formal agreement). In cases that a metonymic shift would be revealed nearby, the whole sentence should be recast to avoid the metonymy. (For example, "The team are fighting among themselves" may become "the team members are fighting among themselves" or simply "The team is infighting.") Collective proper nouns are usually taken as singular ("Apple is expected to release a new phone this year"), unless the plural is explicit in the proper noun itself, in which case it is taken as plural ("The Green Bay Packers are scheduled to play the Minnesota Vikings this weekend"). More explicit examples of collective proper nouns include "General Motors is once again the world's largest producer of vehicles," and "Texas Instruments is a large producer of electronics here," and "British Airways is an airline company in Europe." Furthermore, "American Telephone & Telegraph is a telecommunications company in North America." Such phrases might look plural, but they are not.

Examples of metonymic shift

A good example of such a metonymic shift in the singular-to-plural direction (which exclusively takes place in British English) is the following sentence: "The team have finished the project." In that sentence, the underlying thought is of the individual members of the team working together to finish the project. Their accomplishment is collective, and the emphasis is not on their individual identities, but they are still discrete individuals; the word choice "team have" manages to convey both their collective and discrete identities simultaneously. Collective nouns that have a singular form but take a plural verb form are called collective plurals. A good example of such a metonymic shift in the plural-to-singular direction is the following sentence: "Mathematics is my favorite academic subject." The word "mathematics" may have originally been plural in concept, referring to mathematic endeavors, but metonymic shift (the shift in concept from "the endeavors" to "the whole set of endeavors") produced the usage of "mathematics" as a singular entity taking singular verb forms. (A true mass-noun sense of "mathematics" followed naturally.)

Nominally singular pronouns can be collective nouns taking plural verb forms, according to the same rules that apply to other collective nouns. For example, it is correct usage in both British English and American English usage to say: "None are so fallible as those who are sure they're right." In that case, the plural verb is used because the context for "none" suggests more than one thing or person.[3] This also applies to the use of an adjective as a collective noun: "The British are coming!"; "The poor will always be with you."

Other examples include:

This does not, however, affect the tense later in the sentence:

Abbreviations provide other "exceptions" in American usage concerning plurals:

  • "Runs Batted In" becomes "RBIs". "Smith had 10 RBIs in the last three games."[4]
  • "Revised Statutes Annotated" or RSAs. "The RSAs contain our laws."

When only the name is plural but not the object, place, or person:

Terms of venery

The tradition of using "terms of venery" or "nouns of assembly," collective nouns that are specific to certain kinds of animals, stems from an English hunting tradition of the Late Middle Ages. The fashion of a consciously developed hunting language came to England from France. It was marked by an extensive proliferation of specialist vocabulary, applying different names to the same feature in different animals. The elements can be shown to have already been part of French and English hunting terminology by the beginning of the 14th century. In the course of the 14th century, it became a courtly fashion to extend the vocabulary, and by the 15th century, the tendency had reached exaggerated and even satirical proportions.

The Treatise, written by Walter of Bibbesworth in the mid-1200s, is the earliest source for collective nouns of animals in any European vernacular (and also the earliest source for animal noises).[5] The Venerie of Twiti (early 14th century) distinguished three types of droppings of animals, and three different terms for herds of animals. Gaston Phoebus (14th century) had five terms for droppings of animals, which were extended to seven in the Master of the Game (early 15th century). The focus on collective terms for groups of animals emerged in the later 15th century. Thus, a list of collective nouns in Egerton MS 1995, dated to c. 1452 under the heading of "termis of venery &c.", extends to 70 items,[6] and the list in the Book of Saint Albans (1486) runs to 164 items,[7] many of which, even though introduced by "the compaynys of beestys and fowlys", relate not to venery but to human groups and professions and are clearly humorous, such as "a Doctryne of doctoris", "a Sentence of Juges", "a Fightyng of beggers", "an uncredibilite of Cocoldis", "a Melody of harpers", "a Gagle of women", "a Disworship of Scottis", etc.[8][9]

The Book of Saint Albans became very popular during the 16th century and was reprinted frequently. Gervase Markham edited and commented on the list in his The Gentleman's Academic, in 1595. The book's popularity had the effect of perpetuating many of these terms as part of the Standard English lexicon even if they were originally meant to be humorous and have long ceased to have any practical application.[10]

Even in their original context of medieval venery, the terms were of the nature of kennings, intended as a mark of erudition of the gentlemen able to use them correctly rather than for practical communication.[11] The popularity of the terms in the modern period has resulted in the addition of numerous lighthearted, humorous or facetious[12] collective nouns.

See also

Linguistics concepts
Lists
Interdisciplinary

Further reading

  • Hodgkin, John. "Proper Terms: An attempt at a rational explanation of the meanings of the Collection of Phrases in 'The Book of St Albans', 1486, entitled 'The Compaynys of besties and fowls and similar lists", Transactions of the Philological Society 1907–1910 Part III, pp. 1–187, Kegan, Paul, Trench & Trübner & Co, Ltd, London, 1909.
  • Shulman, Alon. A Mess of Iguanas... A Whoop of Gorillas: An Amazement of Animal Facts. Penguin. (First published Penguin 2009.) ISBN 978-1-84614-255-0.
  • Lipton, James. An Exaltation of Larks, or The "Veneral" Game. Penguin. (First published Grossman Publishers 1968.) (Penguin first reprint 1977 ISBN 0-14-004536-8); in 1993 it was republished in Penguin with The Ultimate Edition as part of the title with the ISBN 0-14-017096-0 (paperback), ISBN 978-0-670-30044-0 (hardcover)
  • PatrickGeorge. A filth of starlings. PatrickGeorge. (First published 2009.) ISBN 978-0-9562558-1-5.
  • Patrick George. A drove of bullocks. Patrick George. (First published 2009.) ISBN 978-0-9562558-0-8.
  • Fanous, Samuel (2014). A Conspiracy of Ravens: a compendium of collective nouns for birds. Oxford: Bodleian Library. ISBN 9781851244096.
  • Fanous, Samuel (2015). A Barrel of Monkeys: a compendium of collective nouns for animals. Oxford: Bodleian Library. ISBN 9781851244454.

References

  1. ^ Rhodes, Chloe (19 September 2014). "Ten of the best collective nouns". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  2. ^ Booij, Geert (2002). The Morphology of Dutch. Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ Strunk & White, The Elements of Style (4th ed., 2000), p. 10.
  4. ^ Garner, Bryan (2009). Garner's Modern American Usage. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. p. 638. ISBN 978-0-19-538275-4.
  5. ^ William Sayers, "Animal vocalization and human polyglossia in Walter of Bibbesworth's 13th-century domestic treatise in Anglo-Norman French" in Sign System Studies (Tartu, 2009) pp. 173–187
  6. ^ David Dalby, Lexicon of the Mediaeval German Hunt: A Lexicon of Middle High German Terms (1050–1500), Associated with the Chase, Hunting with Bows, Falconry, Trapping and Fowling, Walter de Gruyter, 1965, ISBN 978-3-11-081860-4, p. xli.
  7. ^ The lighthearted BBC item "Why a group of hippos is called a bloat" ... see e.g.

    Medina, Kerry (November 9, 2018). "Why a group of hippos is called a bloat". BBC. from the original on August 12, 2021. QUOTE:

    << People have been coming up with terms to describe animal groupings for hundreds of years, but it wasn't until The Book of St Albans, written by Juliana Berners, a 15th-Century Benedictine prioress from England, that they were recorded extensively. Also known by the title The Book of Hawking, Hunting and Blasing of Arms, Berners' 1486 publication of this gentlemen's catalogue of wildlife and hunting included 165 collective nouns for animal species, and is said to make her one of the earliest female authors writing in the English language.

    Yet, the only documented evidence of this woman's existence is the attribution 'Explicit Dam Julyans Barnes in her boke of huntyng', which appeared in the original edition. >>

    says, in part, "Berners' 1486 publication of this gentlemen's catalogue of wildlife and hunting included 165 collective nouns for animal species".
  8. ^ 1901 facsimile reprint, E. Stock, London (pp. 115–117).
  9. ^ Transactions of the Philological Society Volume 26, Issue 3, pp. 79–175, August 1909
  10. ^ Todd, Loreto; Hancock, Ian (1986). International English Usage. Psychology Press. pp. 133–134. ISBN 0-415-05102-9. Retrieved 2011-04-04.
  11. ^ Lipton, James (1993). An Exaltation of Larks. Penguin. p. 8. ISBN 978-0140170962.
  12. ^ Harris, Theodore L.; Hodges, Richard E. (1995). The Literacy Dictionary. International Reading Association. p. 271. ISBN 0-87207-138-3.

External links

  • Collective Nouns
  • "The companyes of bestys & foules" (section from the Book of St Albans)

collective, noun, confused, with, mass, noun, collective, number, collective, numeral, linguistics, collective, noun, word, referring, collection, things, taken, whole, most, collective, nouns, everyday, speech, specific, kind, thing, citation, needed, example. Not to be confused with mass noun collective number or collective numeral In linguistics a collective noun is a word referring to a collection of things taken as a whole Most collective nouns in everyday speech are not specific to one kind of thing citation needed For example the collective noun group can be applied to people a group of people or dogs a group of dogs or objects a group of stones Some collective nouns are specific to one kind of thing especially terms of venery which identify groups of specific animals For example pride as a term of venery always refers to lions never to dogs or cows Other examples come from popular culture such as a group of owls which is called a parliament 1 Different forms of English handle verb agreement with collective count nouns differently For example users of British English generally accept that collective nouns take either singular or plural verb forms depending on context and the metonymic shift that it implies Contents 1 Derivation 2 Affixes 2 1 Proto Indo European 2 2 English 2 3 German 2 4 Dutch 2 5 Swedish 2 6 Esperanto 3 Metonymic merging of grammatical number 3 1 Agreement in different forms of English 3 2 Examples of metonymic shift 4 Terms of venery 5 See also 6 Further reading 7 References 8 External linksDerivation EditMorphological derivation accounts for many collective words and various languages have common affixes for denoting collective nouns Because derivation is a slower and less productive word formation process than the more overtly syntactical morphological methods there are fewer collectives formed this way As with all derived words derivational collectives often differ semantically from the original words acquiring new connotations and even new denotations Affixes EditProto Indo European Edit Early Proto Indo European used the suffix eh to form collective nouns which evolved into the Latin neuter plural ending a Late Proto Indo European used the ending t which evolved into the English ending th as in youth English Edit The English endings age and ade often signify a collective Sometimes the relationship is easily recognizable baggage drainage blockade Though the etymology is plain to see the derived words take on a distinct meaning This is a productive ending as evidenced in the recent coin signage German Edit German uses the prefix ge to create collectives The root word often undergoes umlaut and suffixation as well as receiving the ge prefix Nearly all nouns created in that way are of neuter gender das Gebirge group of hills mountain range lt der Berg mountain or hill das Gepack luggage baggage lt der Pack pack bundle pile das Geflugel poultry fowl birds lt late MHG gevlugel e under the influence of der Flugel wing lt MHG gevugel lt OHG gifugili collective formation of fogal bird das Gefieder plumage lt die Feder feather das Geschwisterkind sibling lt die Schwester sister die Geschwister siblings lt die Schwester sister Der Gebirgszug and die Bergkette also mean mountain range drawing on the words der Zug train and die Kette chain There are also several endings that can be used to create collectives such as welt and masse Dutch Edit Dutch has a similar pattern but sometimes uses the unproductive circumfix ge te 2 berg mountain gt gebergte mountain range been bone gt gebeente skeleton vogel bird gt gevogelte poultry blad leaf gt gebladerte foliage Swedish Edit The following Swedish example has different words in the collective form and in the individual form An individual mosquito is a mygga plural myggor but mosquitos as a collective is mygg Esperanto Edit Esperanto uses the collective infix ar to produce a large number of derived words monto mountain gt montaro mountain range birdo bird gt birdaro flock arbo tree gt arbaro forest ŝipo ship gt ŝiparo fleet manĝilo eating utensil gt manĝilaro silverware cutlery Metonymic merging of grammatical number EditMain articles Synesis and Plurale tantum This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Two examples of collective nouns are team and government which are both words referring to groups of usually people Both team and government are countable nouns consider one team two teams most teams one government two governments many governments Agreement in different forms of English Edit Main article American and British English grammatical differences Subject verb agreement Confusion often stems from the way that different forms of English handle agreement with collective nouns specifically whether or not to use the collective singular the singular verb form with a collective noun The plural verb forms are often used in British English with the singular forms of these countable nouns e g The team have finished the project Conversely in the English language as a whole singular verb forms can often be used with nouns ending in s that were once considered plural e g Physics is my favorite academic subject This apparent number mismatch is a natural and logical feature of human language and its mechanism is a subtle metonymic shift in the concepts underlying the words In British English it is generally accepted that collective nouns can take either singular or plural verb forms depending on the context and the metonymic shift that it implies For example the team is in the dressing room formal agreement refers to the team as an ensemble while the team are fighting among themselves notional agreement refers to the team as individuals That is also the British English practice with names of countries and cities in sports contexts e g Newcastle have won the competition In American English collective nouns almost always take singular verb forms formal agreement In cases that a metonymic shift would be revealed nearby the whole sentence should be recast to avoid the metonymy For example The team are fighting among themselves may become the team members are fighting among themselves or simply The team is infighting Collective proper nouns are usually taken as singular Apple is expected to release a new phone this year unless the plural is explicit in the proper noun itself in which case it is taken as plural The Green Bay Packers are scheduled to play the Minnesota Vikings this weekend More explicit examples of collective proper nouns include General Motors is once again the world s largest producer of vehicles and Texas Instruments is a large producer of electronics here and British Airways is an airline company in Europe Furthermore American Telephone amp Telegraph is a telecommunications company in North America Such phrases might look plural but they are not Examples of metonymic shift Edit A good example of such a metonymic shift in the singular to plural direction which exclusively takes place in British English is the following sentence The team have finished the project In that sentence the underlying thought is of the individual members of the team working together to finish the project Their accomplishment is collective and the emphasis is not on their individual identities but they are still discrete individuals the word choice team have manages to convey both their collective and discrete identities simultaneously Collective nouns that have a singular form but take a plural verb form are called collective plurals A good example of such a metonymic shift in the plural to singular direction is the following sentence Mathematics is my favorite academic subject The word mathematics may have originally been plural in concept referring to mathematic endeavors but metonymic shift the shift in concept from the endeavors to the whole set of endeavors produced the usage of mathematics as a singular entity taking singular verb forms A true mass noun sense of mathematics followed naturally Nominally singular pronouns can be collective nouns taking plural verb forms according to the same rules that apply to other collective nouns For example it is correct usage in both British English and American English usage to say None are so fallible as those who are sure they re right In that case the plural verb is used because the context for none suggests more than one thing or person 3 This also applies to the use of an adjective as a collective noun The British are coming The poor will always be with you Other examples include Creedence Clearwater Revival was founded in El Cerrito California but in British English Creedence Clearwater Revival were founded Arsenal have won the match but in American English Arsenal has won the game Nintendo is a video game company headquartered in Japan This does not however affect the tense later in the sentence Cream is a psychedelic rock band who were primarily popular in the 1960s Abbreviations provide other exceptions in American usage concerning plurals Runs Batted In becomes RBIs Smith had 10 RBIs in the last three games 4 Revised Statutes Annotated or RSAs The RSAs contain our laws When only the name is plural but not the object place or person The bends is a deadly disease mostly affecting SCUBA divers Hot Rocks is a greatest hits compilation by The Rolling Stones Terms of venery EditFurther information List of animal names The tradition of using terms of venery or nouns of assembly collective nouns that are specific to certain kinds of animals stems from an English hunting tradition of the Late Middle Ages The fashion of a consciously developed hunting language came to England from France It was marked by an extensive proliferation of specialist vocabulary applying different names to the same feature in different animals The elements can be shown to have already been part of French and English hunting terminology by the beginning of the 14th century In the course of the 14th century it became a courtly fashion to extend the vocabulary and by the 15th century the tendency had reached exaggerated and even satirical proportions The Treatise written by Walter of Bibbesworth in the mid 1200s is the earliest source for collective nouns of animals in any European vernacular and also the earliest source for animal noises 5 The Venerie of Twiti early 14th century distinguished three types of droppings of animals and three different terms for herds of animals Gaston Phoebus 14th century had five terms for droppings of animals which were extended to seven in the Master of the Game early 15th century The focus on collective terms for groups of animals emerged in the later 15th century Thus a list of collective nouns in Egerton MS 1995 dated to c 1452 under the heading of termis of venery amp c extends to 70 items 6 and the list in the Book of Saint Albans 1486 runs to 164 items 7 many of which even though introduced by the compaynys of beestys and fowlys relate not to venery but to human groups and professions and are clearly humorous such as a Doctryne of doctoris a Sentence of Juges a Fightyng of beggers an uncredibilite of Cocoldis a Melody of harpers a Gagle of women a Disworship of Scottis etc 8 9 The Book of Saint Albans became very popular during the 16th century and was reprinted frequently Gervase Markham edited and commented on the list in his The Gentleman s Academic in 1595 The book s popularity had the effect of perpetuating many of these terms as part of the Standard English lexicon even if they were originally meant to be humorous and have long ceased to have any practical application 10 Even in their original context of medieval venery the terms were of the nature of kennings intended as a mark of erudition of the gentlemen able to use them correctly rather than for practical communication 11 The popularity of the terms in the modern period has resulted in the addition of numerous lighthearted humorous or facetious 12 collective nouns See also EditLinguistics conceptsGrammatical number Mass noun Measure words Plural Plurale tantum SynesisListsList of animal names including names for groupsInterdisciplinarySocial unitFurther reading EditHodgkin John Proper Terms An attempt at a rational explanation of the meanings of the Collection of Phrases in The Book of St Albans 1486 entitled The Compaynys of besties and fowls and similar lists Transactions of the Philological Society 1907 1910 Part III pp 1 187 Kegan Paul Trench amp Trubner amp Co Ltd London 1909 Shulman Alon A Mess of Iguanas A Whoop of Gorillas An Amazement of Animal Facts Penguin First published Penguin 2009 ISBN 978 1 84614 255 0 Lipton James An Exaltation of Larks or The Veneral Game Penguin First published Grossman Publishers 1968 Penguin first reprint 1977 ISBN 0 14 004536 8 in 1993 it was republished in Penguin with The Ultimate Edition as part of the title with the ISBN 0 14 017096 0 paperback ISBN 978 0 670 30044 0 hardcover PatrickGeorge A filth of starlings PatrickGeorge First published 2009 ISBN 978 0 9562558 1 5 Patrick George A drove of bullocks Patrick George First published 2009 ISBN 978 0 9562558 0 8 Fanous Samuel 2014 A Conspiracy of Ravens a compendium of collective nouns for birds Oxford Bodleian Library ISBN 9781851244096 Fanous Samuel 2015 A Barrel of Monkeys a compendium of collective nouns for animals Oxford Bodleian Library ISBN 9781851244454 References Edit Rhodes Chloe 19 September 2014 Ten of the best collective nouns The Guardian Retrieved 23 January 2019 Booij Geert 2002 The Morphology of Dutch Oxford University Press Strunk amp White The Elements of Style 4th ed 2000 p 10 Garner Bryan 2009 Garner s Modern American Usage Oxford New York Oxford University Press p 638 ISBN 978 0 19 538275 4 William Sayers Animal vocalization and human polyglossia in Walter of Bibbesworth s 13th century domestic treatise in Anglo Norman French in Sign System Studies Tartu 2009 pp 173 187 David Dalby Lexicon of the Mediaeval German Hunt A Lexicon of Middle High German Terms 1050 1500 Associated with the Chase Hunting with Bows Falconry Trapping and Fowling Walter de Gruyter 1965 ISBN 978 3 11 081860 4 p xli The lighthearted BBC item Why a group of hippos is called a bloat see e g Medina Kerry November 9 2018 Why a group of hippos is called a bloat BBC Archived from the original on August 12 2021 QUOTE lt lt People have been coming up with terms to describe animal groupings for hundreds of years but it wasn t until The Book of St Albans written by Juliana Berners a 15th Century Benedictine prioress from England that they were recorded extensively Also known by the title The Book of Hawking Hunting and Blasing of Arms Berners 1486 publication of this gentlemen s catalogue of wildlife and hunting included 165 collective nouns for animal species and is said to make her one of the earliest female authors writing in the English language Yet the only documented evidence of this woman s existence is the attribution Explicit Dam Julyans Barnes in her boke of huntyng which appeared in the original edition gt gt says in part Berners 1486 publication of this gentlemen s catalogue of wildlife and hunting included 165 collective nouns for animal species 1901 facsimile reprint E Stock London pp 115 117 Transactions of the Philological Society Volume 26 Issue 3 pp 79 175 August 1909 Todd Loreto Hancock Ian 1986 International English Usage Psychology Press pp 133 134 ISBN 0 415 05102 9 Retrieved 2011 04 04 Lipton James 1993 An Exaltation of Larks Penguin p 8 ISBN 978 0140170962 Harris Theodore L Hodges Richard E 1995 The Literacy Dictionary International Reading Association p 271 ISBN 0 87207 138 3 External links Edit Look up Appendix Glossary of collective nouns by subject or Appendix Collective nouns in Wiktionary the free dictionary Collective Nouns The companyes of bestys amp foules section from the Book of St Albans Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Collective noun amp oldid 1129074421, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.