Collective Nouns in EnglishA2
Learn collective nouns and practice a team and the team sentences so you can use singular and plural correctly in everyday English.
What translations are available?
What modules are required?
Prerequisites
What collective nouns mean
A collective noun names a group as one thing. Words like team, family, and committee point to several people, but the noun itself talks about the whole group. In a sentence, it can stand where another noun would stand: The team won, My family lives nearby, The committee meets on Monday. A collective noun often works with Nouns because it acts as the subject or object of the sentence while still referring to a group.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| team | A team is a group that works together toward one goal. | ||
| class | A class is a group of students who learn together. | ||
| audience | An audience is a group of people who watch or listen to a performance. | ||
| crowd | A crowd is a large group of people in one place. | ||
| family | A family is a group of related people who live or care for each other. | ||
| committee | A committee is a small group that makes decisions or plans events. | ||
| pack | A pack is a group of animals that stay together. | ||
| flock | A flock is a group of birds or sheep. | ||
| group | A group is several people or things considered together. | ||
| staff | A staff is the people who work for a company or place. |
What is a collective noun?
Common collective noun examples
Everyday English uses many collective nouns for people and animals. Team is used for players, class for students, audience for people watching or listening, crowd for a large group of people, family for relatives, and committee for people who make decisions together. You may also see group, staff, crew, panel, and jury. These words are common because they let speakers name a whole set of people quickly: The class is taking a test, The audience applauded, The crew cleaned the deck.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use a singular verb when the group acts as one unit. | ||
| Use a plural verb when the members act separately. | ||
| Use singular pronouns when the group is treated as one thing. | ||
| Use plural pronouns when you want to stress the people inside the group. | ||
| Choose singular agreement with general statements about the whole group. | ||
| Choose plural agreement with individual actions inside the group. |
Which noun best matches an audience?
Group as one or many
A collective noun can take singular forms when the group acts as one unit. In that case, use a singular verb and singular pronouns: The family is traveling together. It has a small car. The same noun can take plural forms when the speaker is thinking about the members separately: The family are arguing about dinner. They want different foods. The choice depends on meaning. Singular forms treat the group as one body. Plural forms treat the people inside the group as separate individuals.
| Usage | Explanation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Present simple statement | Use is with a collective noun when you see the group as one unit in the present. | ||
| Past simple statement | Use was when the collective noun refers to one unit in the past. | ||
| Present simple with members | Use are when the meaning focuses on the people inside the group. | ||
| Past simple with members | Use were when the sentence highlights separate actions by the members. | ||
| Question form | Put the verb before the subject in questions, and keep the same agreement choice. | ||
| Negative form | Add not after the verb, and keep singular or plural agreement as needed. |
When should a collective noun take a singular verb and singular pronoun?
Agreement in real sentences
Collective nouns usually fit the same agreement patterns as other subjects. With a singular view, use is, was, or another singular verb: The committee is meeting now. The crowd was quiet. My team has a new coach. With a plural view, use are, were, or another plural verb: The committee are discussing their plans. The crowd were cheering. My team have different opinions. After the verb, pronouns follow the same choice: it and its for one unit, they and their for separate members. The sentence pattern shows the meaning clearly.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use singular agreement when you want to stress the group as a single unit. | ||
| Use plural agreement when you want to stress the separate people in the group. | ||
| Choose the form that matches the idea you want the listener to notice first. | ||
| Choose plural wording when the members do different things. | ||
| Keep the noun unchanged because the number idea comes from the verb, not the noun ending. |
Singular or plural focus
Speaker focus decides the verb. If the point is the group’s action, identity, or result, the collective noun behaves as singular: The jury has reached a verdict. If the point is the behavior or feelings of the members, it behaves as plural: The jury are talking among themselves. A simple test is to ask whether the sentence describes one decision, one performance, or one event, or whether it describes separate people with different actions, opinions, or reactions. The noun does not change form, but the grammar around it changes with the meaning.
| Region | Variant | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| plural verb | In British English, a collective noun can often take a plural verb when speakers think about the members. | |||
| singular verb | In American English, a collective noun usually takes a singular verb when it names one organization or group. | |||
| news style plural | In British news writing, plural agreement is common with organizations and sports teams. | |||
| news style singular | In American news writing, singular agreement is more common for the same kinds of group nouns. | |||
| member focus | British English often allows plural verbs when the sentence gives extra attention to the people inside the group. | |||
| unit focus | American English usually keeps the group as one unit in similar sentences. |
British and American usage
British and American English often use collective nouns differently. In American English, collective nouns usually take singular verbs: The staff is ready. The government says it will act soon. In British English, plural verbs are common when the speaker thinks about the members as individuals: The staff are ready. The government say they will act soon. This difference appears often with organizations, sports teams, and news reports. A writer chooses singular or plural forms based on local style and on whether the group is seen as one unit or as many people.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use singular agreement with words that name one unit made from many parts. | ||
| Use singular agreement with expressions that behave as fixed phrases. | ||
| Use singular agreement with the noun phrase as a whole, even when the meaning sounds like many people. | ||
| Use singular agreement with names of subjects or fields of study. | ||
| Use singular agreement with pairs or sets treated as one thing. | ||
| Use singular agreement with time or money as one amount. |
Fixed singular expressions
Some collective noun expressions stay singular in standard English. Phrases such as a pair of, a set of, a series of, and a flock of usually take singular verbs because the expression names one complete unit: A pair of shoes is on the floor. A set of keys is missing. A flock of birds is flying south. The singular verb matches the whole expression, not the number of things inside it. In these phrases, the group is treated as one quantity or one collection rather than as separate members.
Take the Quiz!
You can talk about groups correctly using collective nouns
Now you can use collective nouns like team, family, and committee to refer to groups. You also know how to choose singular vs plural grammar (verbs and pronouns) based on whether you mean the group as one unit or the members separately, including key British vs American patterns and fixed singular expressions like a pair of.