This grammar page on ‘Matching verbs to collective nouns’ provided by Oxford Dictionaries says:
Collective nouns are nouns which stand for a group or collection of
people or things. They include words such as audience, committee,
police, crew, family, government, group, and team.
In American English, most collective nouns are treated as singular,
with a singular verb:
√ The whole family was at the table.
√ The government is doing a good job.
√ He prefers an audience that arrives without expectations.
In British English, most collective nouns can be treated as singular
or plural:
The whole family was at the table.[singular collective noun; singular
verb]
The whole family were at the table.[plural collective noun; plural
verb]
The government is doing a good job.[singular collective noun; singular
verb]
The government are doing a good job.[plural collective noun; plural
verb]
There are a few collective nouns (in both British and American
English) that are always used with a plural verb, the most common of
which are police and people:
√ She's happy with the way the police have handled the case.
X She's happy with the way the police has handled the case.
√ It's been my experience that people are generally forgiving.
X It's been my experience that people is generally forgiving.
Although Oxford says collective nouns stand for a group or collection of things as well as people, every example word provided by Oxford stands for a group or collection of people only (audience, committee, police, crew, family, government, group, and team), possibly except for group, because there can be a group of things as well as a group of people.
In general, "things" can include animals as well as inanimate objects. But I don't think that the Oxford grammar editors intended to exclude inanimate objects from the "things". So, I'd like to interpret the "things" as inanimate objects.
Can you treat the collective noun 'group' denoting a collection of inanimate objects as plural in British English as follows?
A group are located on the mountain's south ridge. [Assuming that 'a group' here refers to a group of houses.]
Also, are there other collective nouns that denote a collection of inanimate objects that can be treated as plural in British English as shown by Oxford?
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