lamb 새끼양, 어린양
Lambing
(of a sheep) to give birth to lambs
Lambing is the time in the spring when female sheep give birth to lambs.
Lambing is the climax of the sheep farmer's year.
...the lambing season.
shed
noun [ C ]
B2
a small building, usually made of wood, used for storing things:
a tool/storage shed
UK
a garden/bicycle shed
a large, simple building used for a particular purpose:
the lambing shed
a cow shed
She's planting seeds in the shed.
We keep our bikes in the shed.
shed
verb [ T ]
present participle shedding | past tense and past participle shed
(often used in newspapers) to get rid of something you do not need or want:
900 jobs will be shed over the next few months.
Psychotherapy helped him to shed some of his insecurity/inhibitions.
I'm going on a diet to see if I can shed (= become thinner by losing) a few pounds.
to lose a covering, such as leaves, hair, or skin, because it falls off naturally, or to drop something in a natural way or by accident:
shed its leaves The trees shed their leaves in autumn.
They ran down to the water, shedding clothes as they went.
UK A lorry had shed a load of gravel across the road.
shed tears, blood, etc.
C1
to allow tears or blood to flow:
She shed a few tears at her daughter's wedding.
to release a virus or bacterium from a cell or body into the environment where it can infect other people:
Those who have contracted the new coronavirus shed the virus most heavily in the first few days of the illness.
People shed the virus in respiratory droplets and aerosols.