A lamb is an offspring of a female sheep called a ewe. The ewe had a lamb last night.
Sheep is sheep and lamb is lambs
Yes, "lambs" is a word. It is the plural form of the noun "lamb," which refers to a young sheep.
Both the singular and the plural for the noun sheep is sheep.Examples:Mary had a little lamb that grew up to be a sheep.When Mary grew up, she kept a flock of thirty sheep.
The singular and plural are the same word, for example: one sheep, two sheep, three sheep. Examples: Mary had a little lamb that grew up to be a sheep. When Mary grew up, she kept a flock of thirty sheep.
No, the noun sheep is used as both the singularand the plural form. Examples:Mary had a little lamb that grew up to be a sheep.When Mary grew up, she kept a flock of thirty sheep.
The word sheep is one of a handful in the English language in which the singular and plural forms are exactly the same. Sheep in plural form is just sheep. You could say "I own a sheep" and you could say, "I own a flock (a group) of sheep". You use sheep interchangeably.Examples:I found a sheep in the road.John has six sheep.The dog corralled a flock of sheep.One of my sheep got mixed in with my neighbor's sheep in his sheep pen.
fleecy;) Baby sheep are called lambs.
The plural form of sheep is sheep.One of those "odd" words, an irregular plural.Examples:Mary had a little lamb that grew up to be a sheep.When Mary grew up, she kept a flock of thirty sheep.The plural for sheep is still sheep.
Both the singular and the plural for the noun sheep is sheep.Examples:Mary had a little lamb that grew up to be a sheep.When Mary grew up, she kept a flock of thirty sheep.
Another word for lamb would be sheep or ewe.
lamb
'Pecore' is an Italian equivalent of 'sheep'. It's a feminine noun whose plural definite article is 'le' ['the'] and whose plural definite article is 'delle' ['some']. It's pronounced 'PEH-koh-reh'.