Ewe is a female sheep.
A female sheep is called a ewe. A male is called a ram, or a tup, and mating is called tupping.It's a eweA ewe
Ram itself is a male sheep. A female sheep is called ewe.
An adult male sheep is known as a ram (or, in some areas, a tup); a castrated male sheep is called a wether. An adult female sheep is called a ewe (pronounced yooh), or - at lambing time - a dam, and a baby sheep of either sex is a lamb.Where necessary to list gender of infant sheep, they are referred to as ewe lambs or ram lambs.A sheep aged between lamb and shearing age is known as a hogget; the title depends on when they cut their first permanent incisors, though the name also involves various factors important to sheep farmers.
it is called ewe A ewe. (pronounced "you")
A father sheep is called a ram.
Ewe is female, ram is male
A female sheep is called a ewe. A male is called a ram, or a tup, and mating is called tupping.It's a eweA ewe
Ram is male Ewe is female
The opposite gender of ram (male sheep) is ewe (female sheep).
A sheep: un mouton A ram (male sheep) : un bélier An ewe (female sheep) : une brebis
The female sheep is a ewe; the male is a ram.
ewe
The opposite of ewe (female sheep) would be "ram."
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'.
Ram itself is a male sheep. A female sheep is called ewe.
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.
An adult male sheep is known as a ram (or, in some areas, a tup); a castrated male sheep is called a wether. An adult female sheep is called a ewe (pronounced yooh), or - at lambing time - a dam, and a baby sheep of either sex is a lamb.Where necessary to list gender of infant sheep, they are referred to as ewe lambs or ram lambs.A sheep aged between lamb and shearing age is known as a hogget; the title depends on when they cut their first permanent incisors, though the name also involves various factors important to sheep farmers.