A lamb is an offspring of a female sheep called a ewe. The ewe had a lamb last night.
Sheep is sheep and lamb is lambs
Lambs is the plural of "lamb". Lamb is a noun. In a sentence: look at all the lambs in that field.
Both the singular and the plural for the noun sheep is 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.
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.
No, the noun sheep is used as both the singularand the plural form. Examples:Mary had a little lamb that grew up to be a sheep.When Mary grew up, she kept a flock of thirty sheep.
The word sheep is one of a handful in the English language in which the singular and plural forms are exactly the same. Sheep in plural form is just sheep. You could say "I own a sheep" and you could say, "I own a flock (a group) of sheep". You use sheep interchangeably.Examples:I found a sheep in the road.John has six sheep.The dog corralled a flock of sheep.One of my sheep got mixed in with my neighbor's sheep in his sheep pen.
The plural form of sheep is sheep.One of those "odd" words, an irregular plural.Examples:Mary had a little lamb that grew up to be a sheep.When Mary grew up, she kept a flock of thirty sheep.The plural for sheep is still sheep.
Both the singular and the plural for the noun sheep is 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.
Another word for lamb would be sheep or ewe.
lamb
'Pecore' is an Italian equivalent of 'sheep'. It's a feminine noun whose plural definite article is 'le' ['the'] and whose plural definite article is 'delle' ['some']. It's pronounced 'PEH-koh-reh'.
fleecy;) Baby sheep are called lambs.