양 - yang
in native korean, it is seumul, pronounced /suhmool/, while in sino- korean it is sip, pronounced/sheep/
"오천오십" "oh-chun-oh-sheep"
there is no plural for sheep 1 sheep is call a sheep and more than 1 sheep is call a sheep
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.
Corrine has no meaning in Korean. Only Korean names have meaning in Korean.
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.
No. Sheep are animals, and the word sheep is a noun. It is the same plural as singular (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
Korean men marry Korean woman to cling family lineage. Whereas Korean woman can marry non-Korean men. Percentage intercultural marriage between Korean woman non- Korean men is much highter then Korean men.
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