We are proud to announce our very first Collective Noun lesson on Print Shop. Click through to download and get the lexicon growing!
Now, let’s craft a poem!
First we need fodder:
You might think a group of rhinos is called a herd. Not so! A group of rhinos is a crash. Rhinos are really fast animals, can run up to 30 miles per hour. But rhinos have really poor eyesight and can only see about 30 feet ahead of their nose! A problem, right? Immediately we understand the humor in this collective nouns!
Now craft some sentences:
When I stroll along the shore of the Pacific Ocean, I see all kinds of footprints, of birds and dogs and humans. Not once have I come across a three-toed rhino footprint. But when I imagine the near-sighted CRASH of rhinos far from their swampy home, chasing the gulls just for fun as waves crash upon the California coast, I revel at the wonder of words!
Next, break the sentences into lines and stanzas:
When I stroll along the shore of / the Pacific Ocean, I see all kinds of footprints, /of birds and dogs and humans. // Not once have I come across / a three-toed rhino footprint. // But when I imagine the near-sighted / CRASH of rhinos far from their swampy home, / chasing the gulls just for fun / as waves crash upon the California coast, / I revel at the wonder of words!
Lay out the Collective Noun poem:
When I stroll along the shore of
the Pacific Ocean, I see all kinds of footprints,
of birds and dogs and humans.
Not once have I come across
a three-toed rhino footprint.
But when I imagine the near-sighted
CRASH of rhinos far from their swampy home,
chasing the gulls just for fun
as waves crash upon the California coast,
I revel in the wisdom of words!
~Kimberly
