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'.
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.
ram is male and ewe is female
A sheep: un mouton A ram (male sheep) : un bélier An ewe (female sheep) : une brebis
Ewe. It is the female that is the masculine of the word "ram"...
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
Sheep is neuter. A female sheep is a "ewe', pronounced - you-. A male is a "ram", or "tup". A castrated male is a "wether".
Gerald is the masculine form. The feminine form is Geraldine.