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The phrase "a group of object" is not correct in English; it should be "a group of objects." You can use it when referring to multiple items or entities that are being considered collectively.
Example: "The scientist studied a group of objects found at the archaeological site."
Alternatives: "a collection of items" or "a set of objects."
Exact(3)
Pairs of complex eyes of insects represent another example, together forming a group of two clusters of ommatidia and thus a group of object clusters.
The same applies to the worldwide distribution of deciduous forests, which forms a group of object groups or, at a finer level of granularity, even a group of groups of cell clusters.
Another example is the distribution pattern of all honeybee colonies in a given region, with each colony being an object group and their distribution being a group of object groups.
Similar(57)
A group of objects from the house provides a vignette of High Victorian domesticity, with a touch of the exotic.
The bank agreed and he was retained to assemble a group of objects that reflects design reform after 1870.
Each common vector found (feature vector) is the grasp configuration for a group of objects, which implies the future end-effector design.
An object-oriented PDE solver framework is a library of software components for numerical solution of partial differential equations, where each component is an object or a group of objects.
Rather, Mr. Williams, wearing a red-checked gingham shirt, a brown fedora and baggy blue jeans, was explaining a group of objects that had been carefully arranged in the open mouth of a whimsical fiberglass monster.
One of those items that tells a story through engravings and illustrations is a small elm bark box that was among a group of objects returned to the Mohegans by the Peabody Essex Museum.
In order to model the scattering of a group of objects embedded in a lossy medium under a rough boundary, we applied the method of Green's functions and extended the Kirchhoff approximation for the case of composed systems.
Spoerri became best known for his so-called "snare" pictures, fixing a group of objects or the remains of a meal left haphazardly on a horizontal board, and then hanging them vertically on a wall.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com