No it is a herbivore
It's an organism that eats both meat and plants. Like a herbivore and carnivore combined.
Yes (that means that they do not eat meat) A: most of the time they are herbivorous, however they will occasional eat insects making them opportunistic omnivores (implying they eat both animals and plants)
They're omnivores. Although their diet primarily consists of vegetation and seeds, they are also known to actively hunt other species of monkey (and other small animals).
there is no plural for sheep 1 sheep is call a sheep and more than 1 sheep is call a sheep
lion fishes are not ommivore, they are carnivore
Columbian Sheep is a breed of sheep. They are a larger framed white face 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.
The plural of 'sheep' is actually the same - just 'sheep'. So you have one sheep, or ten sheep. Not sheeps. A group of sheep is called a flock or a herd of sheep.
According to the Chinese Zodiac the years of the Sheep are: 1907: Fire Sheep 1919: Earth Sheep 1931: Metal Sheep 1943: Water Sheep 1955: Wood Sheep 1967: Fire Sheep 1979: Earth Sheep 1991: Metal Sheep 2003: Water Sheep 2015: Wood Sheep 2027: Fire Sheep 2039: Earth Sheep
No. Sheep are animals, and the word sheep is a noun. It is the same plural as singular (sheep).
I'd prefer to see "are sheep" - as in "there are sheep all over the mountainside". I'd reserve "sheep is" for an individual animal - as in "this sheep is lame",
A clay sheep is a sheep made out of clay