Take a day off and kill 15 on any two days.
To slaughter 25 sheep in 5 days without slaughtering an odd number each day, you can slaughter 4 sheep each day for the first 4 days, totaling 16 sheep. On the fifth day, you would then slaughter the remaining 9 sheep. This way, you adhere to the restriction of not slaughtering in odd numbers on the first four days and still manage to slaughter all 25 sheep within the allotted time.
Well, friend, I believe there's a happy little solution here. You can achieve this by starting with 1 sheep on the first day, then 3 sheep on the second day, 5 sheep on the third day, and so on. By following this pattern of odd numbers each day, you'll reach your goal in 5 days without harming any even-numbered sheep. Just remember, every sheep is special and deserves kindness.
As they may be being exported for breeding purposes or in some countries which don't have refrigeration easily accessible they have to slaughter each day so need the sheep to arrive alive.
If the question refers to the days of the week, then there are the same number for each day of the week.
There are hundreds of sheep killed each year for food. The exact number of sheep killed varies from country to country.
A herd of unsheared sheep are called unshorn sheep. The sheep are sheared for their pricey wool each year.
One month can equal each of those numbers of days.
Give each sheep you want to breed wheat.
about 2million-18million sheep each year. usually by electrical stunning and sticking.
By insects/flies and the sheep rubbing on each others wool.
The sound made by a sheep is called "bleating." It is a vocalization used by sheep to communicate with each other, often to signal distress, hunger, or to locate each other.
No, sheep are neither carnivores nor scavengers, they do not eat each other.