different between horses vs sheep

horses

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?h?rs?s/, /?h?rs?z/

Noun

horses

  1. plural of horse
  2. (slang) horsepower
    • 1979, Al Greenwood and Lou Gramm, "Rev on the Red Line" from Head Games:
      I got four hundred horses tucked under the hood.
    • 1994, Blood (The X-Files)
      This is a diagnostic test of your engine. You're supposed to have an output of a hundred and sixty-eight horses at sixty-two hundred R.P.M.s. You're nowhere near that.

Verb

horses

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of horse

Anagrams

  • hosers, shoers, shores

horses From the web:

  • what horses are running in the preakness
  • what horses are running in the kentucky derby
  • what horses eat
  • what horses are running in the preakness 2020
  • what horses won the triple crown
  • what horses are racing today
  • what horses are used for racing
  • what horses are running in the breeders cup


sheep

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) enPR: sh?p, IPA(key): /?i?p/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?ip/
  • Rhymes: -i?p

Etymology 1

From Middle English sheep, scheep, schep, schepe, from Old English s??ap, from Proto-West Germanic *sk?p, from Proto-Germanic *sk?p? (compare West Frisian skiep, North Frisian schäip, Dutch schaap, German Schaf), beside *keppô (compare Old Norse kjappi (buck), dialectal German Kippe (newborn calf)), of unknown origin. Perhaps from the same Scythian word (compare Ossetian ??? (cæw, goat), Persian ???? (?apiš, yearling goat)) which was borrowed into Albanian as cjap, sqap (buck) and into Slavic (compare Polish cap). After Kroonen, *sk?p? is instead from the root of Proto-Germanic *skaban? (to scratch) via Kluge's law.

Alternative forms

  • shoop (slang, chiefly humorous)
  • sheeps (plural, nonstandard or obsolete, often humorous)
  • sheepe (obsolete)

Noun

sheep (countable and uncountable, plural sheep)

  1. (countable) A woolly ruminant of the genus Ovis.
  2. (countable) A timid, shy person who is easily led by others.
  3. (countable, chiefly Christianity, chiefly plural) A religious adherent, a member of a congregation or religious community (compare flock).
    • 1990, Dave Mustaine, "Holy Wars... The Punishment Due", Megadeth, Rust in Peace.
  4. (uncountable) Sheepskin leather.
  5. (countable, speech recognition) A person who is easily understood by a speech recognition system; contrasted with goat.
Synonyms
  • See also Thesaurus:sheep
Derived terms
Descendants
  • Tok Pisin: sipsip (reduplication)
    • ? Rotokas: sipisipi
  • ? Abenaki: azib (from "a sheep")
  • ? Chuukese: siip
  • ? Coeur d'Alene: sip
  • ? Quiripi: sheeps
Translations

See also

Further reading

  • sheep on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • sheep on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Ovis on Wikispecies.Wikispecies

Etymology 2

Noun

sheep

  1. (chiefly humorous) plural of shoop

References

Anagrams

  • Ephes., HEPES, heeps, shepe

Middle English

Alternative forms

  • scheep, schep, schepe

Etymology

From Old English sc?ap, from Proto-Germanic *sk?p? beside *keppô, of unknown origin.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?e?p/, /???p/

Noun

sheep (plural sheep)

  1. sheep

Descendants

  • English: sheep, shoop
    • Tok Pisin: sipsip (reduplication)
      • ? Rotokas: sipisipi
    • ? Abenaki: azib (from "a sheep")
    • ? Chuukese: siip
    • ? Coeur d'Alene: sip
    • ? Quiripi: sheeps
  • Scots: sheep
  • Yola: zheep

Scots

Etymology

From Middle English sheep, scheep, schep, schepe, from Old English sc?ap, from Proto-Germanic *sk?p?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?ip]

Noun

sheep (plural sheeps)

  1. sheep (woolly ruminant of the genus Ovis)

Alternative forms

  • schepe, scheep, scheip, schip, schap

sheep From the web:

  • what sheep eat
  • what sheep eat in minecraft
  • what sheep are you
  • what sheep have horns
  • what sheep produces the best wool
  • what sheep are you today
  • what sheep breeds are used for meat
  • what sheep look like
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