

Only if they don’t want to be condemned to hellfire for the blasphemy of monotheism
Only if they don’t want to be condemned to hellfire for the blasphemy of monotheism
A gay agenda of peacocks
I guess I just think that there’s a marked difference between using collective nouns that already exist in a language and making up brand new ones whole cloth just for the sake of being clever.
Merriam-Webster writes that most terms of venery fell out of use in the 16th century, including a “murder” for crows. It goes on to say that some of the terms in The Book of Saint Albans were “rather fanciful”, explaining that the book extended collective nouns to people of specific professions, such as a “poverty” of pipers. It concludes that for lexicographers, many of these do not satisfy criteria for entry by being “used consistently in running prose” without meriting explanation. Some terms that were listed as commonly used were “herd”, “flock”, “school”, and “swarm”.
None of those are goofy terms though…
A Dog Took My Face And Gave Me A Better Face To Change The World: The Celeste Cunningham Story
I too have read David Foster Wallace/Ernest Hemingway/Virginia Woolf
There are lots of adaptations of Greek myth, but none of them are especially faithful to the source material