ewe
The opposite gender of ram (male sheep) is ewe (female sheep).
An ewe is a female sheep
a female sheep.
ewe
In Afrikaans, a female sheep is called a "skaap." The term is used generally for sheep, but to specify a female, one might say "ooi." The word "ooi" distinguishes the female from the male sheep, which is referred to as a "ram."
An adult female sheep is called a ewe. Ewe comes from the old English word eowu
The female sheep is called a ewe.
The noun 'shepherdess' is a gender noun specifically for a female who tends sheep. The noun 'shepherd' is a common gender noun as a word for a male or a female who tends sheep.
In English, there is no distinction between masculine, feminine and neuter. Noun and verb forms are neutral. Gender is shown by different forms or different words: Shepherd is a word for a male; shepherdess is a word for a female. Ram is a word for a male sheep; ewe is a word for a female sheep.
Sheep are animals, they come as males and females. So a female sheep is a sheep that is female.
ram is male and ewe is female
Mugoma is a kikuyu word which means a female sheep.