The plural of sheep is also sheep.
One young sheep is a lamb, more than one young sheep are lambs
lambs or weaners depending on their age
I think it would be sheep
It depends on how many sheep there are, one sheep doesn't eat as much as one horse
They are an animal that ruminates. It has more than one stomach.
Any more than one
A Mariano sheep will yield between ten and eighteen pounds in one shearing. The male sheep is larger and yields more wool than the female.
It takes less animals to produce more milk with a cow-based dairy than a sheep- or goat-based dairy. One dairy cow will produce more milk over a period of time than one goat or sheep.
The flesh of a sheep younger than one year of age is known as lamb. The flesh of sheep older than one year of age is known as mutton.
The answer depends on whether you are talking about one sheep, or several sheep. If there is only one sheep and the vet is attending to all its feet, you would say: "The vet is attending to all the sheep's feet." If there is more than one sheep, however, you would say "the vet is attending to all the sheeps' feet."
2 sheepsSheep is also the plural: you can speak of one sheep or two sheep. You can also have a whole flock of sheep (similar in concept to a herd of cattle).
Just one sheep is going to have to live on more land than one square meter. They need at least 3 square meters for their eating purposes.