A male sheep is called a Ram.
An adult female is referred to as a ewe (/juː/), an intact male as a ram, occasionally a tup, a castrated male as a whether, and a young sheep as a lamb.
A ram
An intact male sheep is called a Ram, a castrated male is called a Wether.
Ram is an intact male Wether is a castrated male sheep
An intact male pig, or a pig that has not been castrated, is called a "boar." A male pig that is not intact, or has been castrated, is called a "hog."
Young male sheep are called Buck Lambs...when they are fully grown they are called Rams. Male sheep are sometimes referred to as tups. Rams and tups are only intact males; casterated males are called wethers.
An intact male sheep is called a ram. Rams are known for their large, curled horns and are typically used for breeding purposes.
Intact male sheep are called rams, males that have been castrated are known as whethers.
A ram is a male sheep and a ewe is a female sheep.
A male sheep is a ram, a female is an ewe, and a young sheep is a lamb.
A sheep is never called a Mutton. A mutton is meat from a mature domestic sheep. A Ram is an intact male sheep. A Ewe is an intact female sheep A Wether is a castrated male sheep. A lamb is a young sheep. Lambing is giving birth to sheep. A Flock is a group of sheep.
ram = male sheep ewe = female sheep lamb = young sheep