ewe

listen to the pronunciation of ewe
English - Turkish
ewe Iamb dişi kuzu
dişi koyun
gözbebeği
{i} marya [(Zooloji) ]
marya
{i} koyun

Ve böylece aslan koyuna aşık oldu. - And thus the lion fell in love with the ewe.

ewe lamb
dişi kuzu
draft ewe
Dağlık arazide uzun süre sürüde kalmış ve dolayısıyla daha fazla yavru alınabilmesi için seçilerek ova çiftliklerine gönderilmiş koyun
ewes
Koyunların
female sheep
dışı koyun
English - English
Of or pertaining to the Ewe people or language
An ethnic group who inhabit southeastern Ghana, Togo, and Benin
The Niger-Congo language, belonging to the Gbe family, spoken by these people
A female sheep, as opposed to a ram
{n} a she sheep, a female sheep
An ethnic group who inhabit southeastern Ghana, Togo and Benin
The female of the sheep, and of sheeplike animals
{i} female sheep
A ewe is an adult female sheep. a female sheep. Peoples of southeastern Ghana, southern Benin, and southern Togo. They speak dialects of Gbe, a Kwa language of the Niger-Congo family. The Ewe never formed a single centralized state, remaining a collection of independent communities that made temporary alliances in time of war. Most Ewe are farmers; some coastal Ewe fish. Spinning, weaving, pottery making, and blacksmithing are important crafts. They number more than 3.5 million
a Kwa language spoken by the Ewe people in Ghana and Togo and Benin
female sheep a Kwa language spoken by the Ewe people in Ghana and Togo and Benin a member of a people living in southern Benin and Togo and southeastern Ghana
a member of a people living in southern Benin and Togo and southeastern Ghana
ewe-lamb
female lamb, young female sheep
A ewe
yeo
A ewe
yowe
ewes
plural of ewe
ewe

    Turkish pronunciation

    yu

    Pronunciation

    /ˈyo͞o/ /ˈjuː/

    Etymology

    [ 'yü, in rural dials al ] (noun.) before 12th century. Old English ēowu, feminine of eow 'sheep', from Proto-Germanic *awiz (compare West Frisian ei 'ewe', Dutch ooi 'id.', Old High German ouwi 'sheep'), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ówis 'sheep' (compare Hittite ḫau̯i, Old Irish ói, Latin ovis, Tocharian B ā(u)w, Lithuanian avìs 'ewe', Old Church Slavonic овьнъ (ovĭnŭ) 'ram', овьца (ovĭca) 'ewe; sheep', Ancient Greek ὄϊς (óïs), Sanskrit अवि (ávi)).
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