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A company or collection of living creatures; -- especially applied to sheep and birds, rarely to persons or (except in the plural) to cattle and other large animals; as, a flock of ravenous fowl.
To gather in companies or crowds.
To flock to; to crowd.
A group of birds, typically the same species, but sometimes mixed. Flocks are often formed by local populations to seek out food supplies or migrate to better climates.
A group of sheep, chicken, or turkeys.
A group of sheep, goats, chickens.
A group of sheep or poultry.
The collective name for a group of birds (usually chickens).
The name of the family group of many animals. In the arctic the family group of the Dall Sheep is called a flock.
The name used for some groups of animals of all the same kind. For example, birds, goats, sheep, geese, etc.
an orderly crowd; "a troop of children"
move as a crowd or in a group; "Tourists flocked to the shrine where the statue was said to have shed tears"
come together as in a cluster or flock; "The poets constellate in this town every summer"
a collection of sheep or people who need care and feeding
a group of hens of similar age that are managed and housed together
bunch of chickens
A group of animals that live, travel, or feed together.
A group of birds, sheep, or goats that travel, live, or feed together.
a group of birds made up of same or diverse species
A small group of sheep.
1. A group of sheep managed in fenced pastures and not herded. Birds of the same age in one group.
a group of animals of one kind keeping, feeding or herded together, especially sheep, goats or birds [flock is also a tuft of wool or cotton
A group of chickens living together.
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