I wish more people thought about how knowledge of labels and conventions is different from knowledge of facts.
"A group of wolves is called a pack" is only labeling. It's somewhat helpful for knowing what other people mean when they say "a wolf pack," but it doesn't tell you anything about wolves. It's not like they call it a pack. And if someone says "there's a flock of wolves in the park," well, weird phrasing but you know exactly what they mean.
"A group of wolves usually consists of a breeding pair and their juvenile and adult offspring" is a fact about reality. If someone says "wolf packs are led by an alpha who defeated the other males in battle," they're meaningfully wrong.
This sounds extremely basic but I see people failing to understand the distinction so often. Is a rabbit a member of the clade Glires? Well, that's how we generally agree to classify it. Does a rabbit breathe oxygen? Yes, that is a thing rabbits actually do.