Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Tim Leaning Date: 13 Nov 09 - 11:56 AM A Fust of cardigans A Badger of Beards |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Piers Plowman Date: 13 Nov 09 - 06:18 AM A battery of cimbalists A convolute of serpent-players |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Piers Plowman Date: 13 Nov 09 - 06:14 AM A flock of pan-pipers A rash of singer-songwriters A bend of crumhornists A mint of penny-whistlers A storm of of bodhranists A press of autoharpists |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Bryn Pugh Date: 13 Nov 09 - 05:28 AM A clutch of shaky eggs. I'll get me Barbour . . . |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,Seonaid Date: 12 Nov 09 - 12:16 PM LOL -- you topped me there! (And I know how old you must be, nyah-nyah-nyah!) |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST Date: 12 Nov 09 - 08:20 AM An Efrem of cymbalists - only if they number 77 all doing a Sunset Strip! |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,Bob L Date: 12 Nov 09 - 06:26 AM A conflict of callers... |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Smokey. Date: 11 Nov 09 - 08:28 PM A monotony of smallpipes. An unwelcomeness of saxophones. A gust of whistlers. A sweetness of ukeleles. An unlikeliness of violas. A fisting of French horns. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Smokey. Date: 11 Nov 09 - 07:52 PM Perhaps that should be 'A grip of racketteers'. A belligerence of bassists. A smugness of flautists. A perversion of concertina....ists. A twangling of Appalachian dulcimers. A ludicrosity of serpents. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Smokey. Date: 11 Nov 09 - 07:16 PM Aw Tootler, you spoilsport - I liked that one.. An oddness of crumhorns. A belligerence of shanty-mongers. A competitiveness of guitarists. A plague of fiddlers. A flare of cornetti. A grip of racketts. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Tootler Date: 11 Nov 09 - 06:12 PM A persuasion of shawms. No, you can't have that one. Shawms already have a collective noun dating from the 16th century: A noyse [sic] of shawms |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,Seonaid Date: 11 Nov 09 - 02:47 PM Re spoons -- Does one spoon equal a half-couple of spoons? |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: VirginiaTam Date: 11 Nov 09 - 02:38 PM A Pedantry of Folk Definitionists? A Definition of Folk Pedants? |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,Seonaid Date: 11 Nov 09 - 02:19 PM A blat of fluegelhorns An ornamentation of sean-nos singers A pierce of piccolos A clank of cowbells A stir of spoons An Efrem of cymbalists |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Murray MacLeod Date: 11 Nov 09 - 01:58 PM pedants should always check carefully before they pontificate. Nouns of assembly are considered by grammarians to be a subset of collective nouns, inasmuch as the noun can be used on its own, without necessarily requiring the "of ********" qualification. " I set off to hunt for buffalo. I knew that there was a huge herd just over the hill" Herd is a collective noun. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,Steamin' Willie Date: 11 Nov 09 - 01:50 PM "Oh dear. I'm afraid I have been sent by the British Union of Pedants to disqualify all the above examples. They are all Nouns of Assembly. A collective noun does not include a description of the elements which constitute the single element - put simply NO 'OF'. Hence Parliament is a collective noun," Oh heck! Does that mean I can't have a weird beard of shanty singers? Or a sandals of concertina players? I suppose a sanctimoniousness of unaccompanied singers is out of the question too. Ah well. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Derby Ram Date: 11 Nov 09 - 09:50 AM OK - Then: A BAND of Concertinists A PEDDLING of Organists A BICYCLE of Pedants (dislecsik egzampal) A CHORD of Guitarists A MARCH of Tubas A SHOWER of singers A PIG of Whistlers A BAG of Pipers A WHINGEING of Pedants |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Tim Leaning Date: 11 Nov 09 - 08:52 AM "Oh dear. I'm afraid I have been sent by the British Union of Pedants to disqualify all the above examples. They are all Nouns of Assembly. A collective noun does not include a description of the elements which constitute the single element - put simply NO 'OF'. Hence Parliament is a collective noun," What only a collective noun? |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Mr Red Date: 11 Nov 09 - 07:07 AM An interjection of hecklers followed by a rip host of MC's? And in honour of the most helpful and knowledgeable of the clan: A Malcolm Douglas of Folklorists. (It would take a collection to equal his endeavours). |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Callie Date: 11 Nov 09 - 06:08 AM An eternity of Gospel singers |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Georgiansilver Date: 11 Nov 09 - 06:02 AM A bothering of Bodhrans... or banjos????... |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: melodeonboy Date: 11 Nov 09 - 05:56 AM "A migraine of melodeons!" Wonderful! Yet more pedantry, please! You've whetted my appetite! |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Young Buchan Date: 11 Nov 09 - 05:48 AM Of course, from an entirely different root, 'terms of venery' can also mean sexual terms. Chris P's suggestion of 'an arseful of pedantry' would not qualify under this heading either. But 'an arseful of pedants' probably would. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Young Buchan Date: 11 Nov 09 - 05:34 AM "To further the cause of pedantry, these are often referred to as 'terms of venery'" Quite correct Bill. Though strictly/pedantically that should only be applied to groups of creatures that are to be hunted down and killed. So 'a twang of banjo players' would hardly be ...... Oh. OK. I see your point. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Amos Date: 10 Nov 09 - 08:51 PM A pound of bodhrans, a plectrum of Martins, a frenzy of bnjos, a swoop of fiddles... |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Smokey. Date: 10 Nov 09 - 08:13 PM An ascendance of mellotrons. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Chris Green Date: 10 Nov 09 - 07:46 PM A wobwobwob of moogs. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Smokey. Date: 10 Nov 09 - 07:32 PM A wheezing of harmoniums. (or harmoniae/harmonia, for the pedants) An exhalation of ocarinas. A persuasion of shawms. An intrusion of bodhráns. An embarrassment of singer/songwriters. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Acorn4 Date: 10 Nov 09 - 06:37 PM A migraine of melodeons! |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Chris Partington Date: 10 Nov 09 - 04:31 PM An arseful of pedantry. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Bill D Date: 10 Nov 09 - 04:19 PM To further the cause of pedantry, these are often referred to as 'terms of venery' |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Tim Leaning Date: 10 Nov 09 - 03:53 PM A stool of pianos. A tonal of fiddles A university of Folkies A R.S.E of playing that new song. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Tug the Cox Date: 10 Nov 09 - 03:49 PM A tedium of pedants. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: VirginiaTam Date: 10 Nov 09 - 03:49 PM damn.. just googled winter of malcontents. I am not so brilliant as I thought I was. sigh |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: melodeonboy Date: 10 Nov 09 - 03:46 PM Hurrah for pedantry! |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Young Buchan Date: 10 Nov 09 - 03:22 PM Oh dear. I'm afraid I have been sent by the British Union of Pedants to disqualify all the above examples. They are all Nouns of Assembly. A collective noun does not include a description of the elements which constitute the single element - put simply NO 'OF'. Hence Parliament is a collective noun, since we do not say 'a Parliament of MPs'; but a parliament of owls is a noun of assembly. Other examples of genuine collective nouns would be The Navy, humanity or womankind. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Smokey. Date: 10 Nov 09 - 02:18 PM A wittering of whistles. A race of fiddlers. A muddle of melodeons. An inferno of sundry percussionists. A bandwagon of political folksingers. A skipful of banjos. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: VirginiaTam Date: 10 Nov 09 - 01:54 PM Came up with this one today. But I thought of it only as a normal collective noun. Upon filtering for a collective noun thread to add it too, found this one was not closed. Turns out it could be a good name for an aging folk group. A Winter of Malcontents |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,milk monitor Date: 30 Sep 04 - 07:28 PM A flight case of roadies. A timetable of tour managers. |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: TheBigPinkLad Date: 30 Sep 04 - 07:04 PM A bounty of coconut cloppers A shortwave of saw players A suspicion of agents An ocean of shanties A twattle of PELites |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: el_punkoid_nouveau Date: 30 Sep 04 - 03:36 PM Rethink - a voltage of electric guitarists! An excess of squeezebox players... A mouthfull of callers... |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: el_punkoid_nouveau Date: 30 Sep 04 - 03:34 PM A vault of electric guitarists? |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Georgiansilver Date: 30 Sep 04 - 01:57 PM A stride of piano stools. A round of Good ales A picking of strings |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Genie Date: 30 Sep 04 - 01:03 PM "a niggle of critics" "a box of accordionists" "a capella of unaccompanied singers" "a bismal of banjos" LMAO! §:-D How about these? a smut of rappers a staggering of pub singers a contrivance of teen pop divas a trocity of bodhran players a gumbo of Zydeco musicians |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: John MacKenzie Date: 30 Sep 04 - 11:35 AM Surely it must be a Caprine of Bodhran players. Giok |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,The Scone Fairy Date: 30 Sep 04 - 11:17 AM An Armpit of bodhran players. Only jokin' lads! Honest!!! |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,Frug Date: 30 Sep 04 - 10:24 AM Nay..........surely an ego of singer songwriters and yet.......an apology of accordionists a drone of pipers a grimace of hurdy gurdy players an annoyance of nyckelharpers an obmutescence of banjoists |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,Fr Date: 30 Sep 04 - 10:17 AM |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: Chris Green Date: 30 Sep 04 - 09:07 AM In which case, surely the collective noun for singer-songwriters' albums must be "the Bonfire of the Vanity Projects"! :-) |
Subject: RE: Collective nouns for folk music From: GUEST,noddy Date: 30 Sep 04 - 04:33 AM a bonfire of banjos ( just wishful thinking on my part) |
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