In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun 'ewe' is a gender specific noun for a female sheep.
The gender specific noun for a male sheep is 'ram'.
ram is the name for a female sheep.
It is a ram.
that would be lilith.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun for a female is ewe or dam.The noun for a male is buck or ram.
Ewe. It is the female that is the masculine of the word "ram"...
ram is male and ewe is female
un mouton (masc.) Of course some sheep are feminine - the word for a ewe is 'une brebis' (fromage de brebis - ewe's cheese is one of my favourite cheeses). A lamb can also be masculine - 'un agneau', or feminine - 'une agnelle'.
Ram itself is a male sheep. A female sheep is called ewe.
If you mean the PLURAL form of ewe its simply "ewes"See Related Links below for references.
that is the masculine form
Gerald is the masculine form. The feminine form is Geraldine.
The masculine form for "tendre" in French is "tendre" as well. The word does not change in form based on gender.
Dennis is the masculine form of Denise.