English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

11 answers

i couldnt find it anywhere. cardinals would be clever but i dont think thats right.

2007-03-28 09:39:50 · answer #1 · answered by peach 3 · 0 0

Priests?
Mice?

2007-03-28 16:17:28 · answer #2 · answered by marie m 5 · 0 0

Strangely enough, most sources say that it is
"a church of squirrels"

Well, now we know!
:-)

2007-03-28 17:03:21 · answer #3 · answered by Shannon 2 · 0 0

Cardinals, maybe?

2007-03-28 16:12:25 · answer #4 · answered by Toph 4 · 2 0

I thought it was bats

2007-03-28 16:17:17 · answer #5 · answered by Billy T 1 · 0 0

I don't think there is one!

couldnt find it here

2007-03-28 16:14:18 · answer #6 · answered by Nutsack 2 · 0 0

Sheep!!..

2007-03-28 16:12:58 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think its owls.

2007-03-28 16:12:53 · answer #8 · answered by jeanimus 7 · 0 0

humans.


See the definition for flock and the commentary following:
1. A group of animals that live, travel, or feed together.
2. A group of people under the leadership of one person, especially the members of a church.
3. A large crowd or number: had a flock of questions.

intr.v., flocked, flock·ing, flocks.

To congregate or travel in a flock or crowd.

[Middle English flok, from Old English floc.]

SYNONYMS flock, herd, drove, pack, gang, brood. These nouns denote a number of animals, birds, or fish considered collectively, and some have human connotations. Flock is applied to a congregation of animals of one kind, especially sheep or goats herded by people, and to any congregation of wild or domesticated birds, especially when on the ground. It is also applicable to people who form the membership of a church or to people under someone's care or supervision. Herd is used of a number of animals, especially cattle, herded by people; or of wild animals such as antelope, elephants, and zebras; or of whales and seals. Applied to people, it is used disparagingly of a crowd or of the masses and suggests the gregarious aspect of crowd psychology. Drove is used of a herd or flock, as of cattle or geese, that is being moved or driven from one place to another; less often it refers to a crowd of people in movement. Pack is applicable to any body of animals, especially wolves, or of birds, especially grouse, and to a body of hounds trained to hunt as a unit. It also refers disparagingly to a band or group of persons. Gang refers to a herd, especially of buffalo or elk; to a pack of wolves or wild dogs; or to various associations of persons, especially when engaged in violent or criminal pursuits. Brood is applicable to offspring that are still under the care of a mother, especially the offspring of domestic or game birds or, less formally, of people. • The following related terms are used as indicated: bevy, a company of roe deer, larks, or quail; cast, the number of hawks or falcons cast off at one time, usually a pair; cete, a company of badgers; covert, a flock of coots; covey, a family of grouse, partridges, or other game birds; drift, a drove or herd, especially of hogs; exaltation, a flight of larks; fall, a family of woodcock in flight; flight, a flock of birds in flight; gaggle, a flock of geese; gam, a school of whales, or a social congregation of whalers, especially at sea; kennel, a number of hounds or dogs housed in one place or under the same ownership; kindle, a brood or litter, especially of kittens; litter, the total number of offspring produced at a single birth by a multiparous mammal; murder, a flock of crows; muster, a flock of peacocks; nide, a brood of pheasants; pod, a small herd of seals or whales; pride, a company of lions; rout, a company of people or animals in movement, especially knights or wolves; school, a congregation of fish, or aquatic mammals such as dolphins or porpoises; shrewdness, a company of apes; skein, a flight of wildfowl, especially geese; skulk, a congregation of vermin, especially foxes, or of thieves; sloth, a company of bears; sord, a flight of mallards; sounder, a herd of wild boar; stable, a number of horses housed in one place or under the same ownership; swarm, a colony of insects, such as ants, bees, or wasps, especially when migrating to a new nest or hive; troop, a number of animals, birds, or people, especially when on the move; warren, the inhabitants, such as rabbits, of a warren; watch, a flock of nightingales; and wisp, a flock of birds, especially of snipe. See also synonyms at crowd.

2007-03-28 16:23:11 · answer #9 · answered by Haley 3 · 0 0

buzzards.

2007-03-28 16:59:36 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers