A Memory of Elephants – and other collectives.

A dray of squirrels makes me lose my religion in the midst of public scrutiny. While, overhead, a gulp of swallows heads back to San Juan Capistrano. I wonder to myself who thought up these strange, peculiar and somewhat hilarious naming conventions.A dray of squirrels


Sometimes the descriptive names for groups of animals (collectives) are terribly suitable. For instance, a pit of snakes could not possibly be more appropriately called. And, no one is going to tell me there could be a better, more accurate name for a group of mosquitoes than a “scourge.”


Nevertheless, it only gets better when you get into the lesser known ones. A still relatively well-known naming is a murder of crows. A group of cows, however, is not called a herd. It is a kine of cows. If you are clumping the bulls and cows under the collective of “cattle,” then it is a team, herd or drove of cattle. Some names have multiple applications, for instance you can have a pod of dolphins, or a pod of pelicans.


There is a bed of oysters. The term “a barrel of monkeys” is literally correct. A gathering of mice is called – again, appropriately – a “mischief of mice.” Then we have the more amusing collectives:


A lounge of lizards.


A sault of lions.


An ascension of larks.


A mob of kangaroos.


A cackle of hyenas.


A bloat of hippopotamuses. (I feel this one is somewhat cruel.) Ditto with a confusion of guinea fowl. (They aren’t the most brilliant of birds.)


I did a little more research and found some even stranger collective names. Here are a few of my favorites:


A party of jays.


A leap of leopards.


A smack of jellyfish.


A tower of giraffes.


An implausibility of gnus. (I think this collective name is so brilliant as to be ridiculous.)


A knot of frogs.


An army of caterpillars.


A memory of elephants. (Yep. That is a good one.)


A pitying of turtle doves.


A cast of crabs.


A quiver of cobras.


And, of course, you have those that go beyond description and into warning:


A destruction of wild cats.


A siege of bitterns.


A bask (or float) of crocodiles.


A wreck of sea birds.


A shrewdness of apes.


 


And, my very favorite collective name: an intrusion of cockroaches!


 


Isn’t English fun?


 


So, what did you learn today? Something cool?  Please share! We all love to learn, right?


~Peace




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Published on August 28, 2012 04:00
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CL Stegall - Writer

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