What’s the term for a group of writers?

My friends and co-workers often harass me for what they call my use of “trivial” words. By “trivial,” they mean words that no one else uses except me. I like to remind them that I once received a free lunch because of my “trivial” knowledge of words.

I was sitting in a sandwich shop waiting for my order. A white board by the cash register said: “This week’s word puzzler. Tell us the term for a group of kittens and your lunch is on the house.”

I recalled my time in library school—before anyone had ever heard of Google—when we were charged with looking up answers to questions like these … and I remembered. The collective term for a group of kittens is kindle.

Since then, I have always been fascinated with terms of venery or words for groups of animals. Oddly enough, the English language is full of them. Here are a few of my favorites, taken from James Lipton’s book An Exaltation of Larks.

• clutch of chicks
• pride of lions
• murder of crows
• pod of dolphins
• a skulk of foxes
• brace of ducks (used for ducks in the air)
• paddling of ducks (used for ducks in the water)
• gaggle of geese (used for geese on the ground)
• skein of geese (used for geese in the air)
• warren of rabbits
• shoal of herring
• a yoke of oxen
• sounder of pigs (used for wild pigs)
• passel of possum
• sleuth or sloth of bears
• herd of dinosaurs (used for herbivores)
• pack of dinosaurs (used for carnivores)
• cackle of hyena
• parliament of owls
• bed of oysters
• bale of turtles

Animals that do not have a term of venery include the koala, panda, opossum, and the platypus. Terms of venery can also be applied to people or professions, such as a swarm of salesmen, a plague of epidemiologists, a cell of biologists, an arrangement of florists.

Now, what could we call a group of writers?

This article first appeared on Ragan Communication’s PR Daily.

14 Responses to “What’s the term for a group of writers?”

  1. edith says:

    how about:

    an inkling of writers or
    a pad of writers

  2. Dan McDowell says:

    I believe a group of writers would be called a “Knot” …or if you take the negative track, a “Not”!

  3. My morning Google Alert produced a link to your post on terms of venery. You’d fit right in with my family!

    http://www.excusemeimwriting.com/2010/08/31/writing/terms-of-venery/

  4. Kemp Ward says:

    You could call them a crop of writers…

  5. Alison Pearce says:

    I quite like the term for a group of rhinos: a crash of rhinos.

  6. Candace Moody says:

    An anthology, of course.

  7. Sal Q. says:

    A ream of writers, no, for the onomatopoeia of it all?

  8. Carol Dutra says:

    A “creation of writers” is the term.

  9. A block of writers.
    A screed of writers.
    An unemployment line of writers.
    An edit of writers.

  10. snapchuck says:

    A worship of writers.