Ah, I assume this is a homework then. Correct me if I'm mistaken.
How would you do if I'd ask you to implement the algorithm? You can see from your sample input that it's easier to count the members of each group when the input is grouped, rather than shuffled in arbitrary order. If you sort the input then you'll get the various elements grouped. Then you will just need to iterate over the sequence once in order to count the members of each group.
When you have the algorithm working, try to refine it such that it never reads an element of the input sequence more than once. If you can satisfy the guarantee that each element is read exactly once, and that the elements are read in order from begin to end then your algorithm will work on input coming directly from an input stream such as stdin (so long as it is coming sorted), with no need to first copy the input from the input stream to a temporary container.