Where do sheep get their wool cut? The baa-baashop!
Just kidding. Shearing or clipping is usually done by skilled shearers. A sheep may be said to be sheared or shorn, depending on the dialect, and raddle is the coloured pigment that is used to mark sheep.
The above example is just a small clipping of the countless words and phrases that stem from sheep and sheep farming that have become part of the English lexicon, which you may find in our crossword clues. Because sheep farming is thought to date back to around 10,000 BC, when wild mouflon were domesticated in ancient Mesopotamia (now Iraq) and because the Bible tells us that wealth was measured in flocks, It’s little wonder then that there are numerous words and phrases.
A ewe or dam is a female sheep and the male is a ram or tup. A wether is a castrated male sheep. A yearling is a sheep between one and two years of age. A hogget is a yearling sheep that has not yet been shorn. Other sheep-farming words we use are shearling, gimmer, teg or theave.
A jumbuck is an Australian term for sheep, which we hear in Banjo Paterson’s song, Waltzing Matilda. A bellwether is an experienced wether, which has a bell around its neck to lead the flock. To look sheepish means to look awkward and shy, and to make sheep’s eyes is to look amorously at someone.
Black wool was considered commercially undesirable because it could not be dyed. So in human terms, the black sheep of the family has become the ne’er-do-well who brings disgrace on the family. I remember hearing a story a few years ago about a flock of white sheep in Hertfordshire that were all sired by a white one-year old ram, and yet all sixty lambs born to that flock were black. I wonder if they all behaved disgracefully.
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