• @seth
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    368 months ago

    Is this real? I always heard “clowder.”

      • Okami
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        38 months ago

        That is a load-bearing “(no explanation necessary)”.

        I’d love to see an explanation. How did we get from ‘clowder’ to ‘destruction’? Gaining a syllable and losing alliteration is not a typical linguistic evolution. Who’s actually using this term?

        The closest I’ve seen actual examples of is a tongue-in-cheek ‘catastrophe of cats’, and that never went mainstream as far as I’m aware.

    • Okami
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      38 months ago

      Ditto. Clowder of cats is the term I’m familiar with.

      “Destruction” of cats is new to me. I don’t think I like it. Doesn’t roll off the tongue well.

  • @Viking_Hippie
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    98 months ago

    Some of the other are great too btw. A smack of jellyfish in particular seems like it’s based on a single traumatic but apparently common experience 😂

  • @Ultraviolet
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    58 months ago

    A conspiracy of lemurs has always been my favorite.

  • Dizzy Devil Ducky
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    fedilink
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    58 months ago

    Okay, if that list doesn’t have a business of otters, it’s incomplete and wrong on so many levels.

  • @Jerb322
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    58 months ago

    Where would one see an ambush of tigers other than a zoo or Circus?

  • @platypus_plumba
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    28 months ago

    If only there was an abstract word that could describe the union of many individuals when grouped together, regardless of their type of individual.

  • @Everythingispenguins
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    8 months ago

    Wait how many do you need to have to make it a destruction? I live with five, should I be worried?

    Also why are jellyfish doing smack? Don’t they know that is bad for them? Though that does explain their slow nature.