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  2. Collective noun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/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. [1] 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").

  3. List of animal names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_animal_names

    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Usage of collective nouns Notes Further reading External links Generic terms The terms in this table apply to many ...

  4. Singulative number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singulative_number

    Welsh has two systems of grammatical number, singular–plural and collective–singulative. Since the loss of the noun inflection system of earlier Celtic, plurals have become unpredictable and can be formed in several ways: by adding a suffix to the end of the word (most commonly -au), as in tad "father" and tadau "fathers", through vowel affection, as in bachgen "boy" and bechgyn "boys", or ...

  5. Grammatical number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_number

    The collective presents similar issues as the distributive in its potential classification as grammatical number, including the fact that some languages allow both collective and plural markers on the same words. Adding a collective to a plural word does not change the number of referents, only how those referents are conceptualized. [315]

  6. Mass noun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_noun

    Generally, collective nouns such as group, family, and committee are not mass nouns but are rather a special subset of count nouns. However, the term "collective noun" is often used to mean "mass noun" (even in some dictionaries) because users conflate two different kinds of verb number invariability: (a) that seen with mass nouns such as ...

  7. Lookup table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lookup_table

    When the program requires the sine of a value, it can use the lookup table to retrieve the closest sine value from a memory address, and may also interpolate to the sine of the desired value, instead of calculating by mathematical formula. Lookup tables can thus used by mathematics coprocessors in computer systems.

  8. Talk:Collective noun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Collective_noun

    The contents of the Collective singular page were merged into Collective noun on 1 December 2018. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history ; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page .

  9. Part-of-speech tagging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Part-of-speech_tagging

    HMMs involve counting cases (such as from the Brown Corpus) and making a table of the probabilities of certain sequences. For example, once you've seen an article such as 'the', perhaps the next word is a noun 40% of the time, an adjective 40%, and a number 20%.