Lamb in a sentence as a noun

So a Beatles fan was kind of a pop lamb to us.

In the "2 wolves and a lamb deciding what's for dinner" sense...

Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to eat for lunch.

For example, Greek gyros is almost always pork, never lamb.

" every time they bite into a lamb kebob, and are regulating their food and drug industries.

I always find these sorts of essays curious, here is a guy who is eating lamb and noting that the fork is an old invention.

Lamb in a sentence as a verb

This had me rolling:>>Its like watching some sadist work over a baby lamb with a rusty crowbar and a broken gin bottle.

A bit of pedantry: it is "on the lam" not "on the lamb" but that is a common enough misconception that I feel pointing it out is actually productive rather than nit-picky.

It isn't that Java 8 will **** Scala, it is that Scala has demonstrated the utility of lambdas to the point where they can safely be incorporated back into Java.

Except that the lamb he is eating is probably from New Zealand, a country that is mesopotamian ancestors couldn't even imagine existed, much less imagine trading with.

First of all, the Christian theological vision of redemption incorporates a much broader view of humanity than one individual's salvation from damnation, it shares much in common with the Marxist view of the end of history in that it also puts hope on a stable everlasting peace and prosperity, where the "lion will lay down with the lamb".I'm not advocating for Christian theology at all, but it would be foolish not to see the Universalist connections between Marxism and Christianity, they both have a vision for the "end of history".So even if the Pope weren't engaging Marx on his own terms here, speaking plainly of a Materialist redemption, which it appears he is doing, his Christian theology would presuppose a good deal of shared understanding in Marx's hope for Utopia.

Lamb definitions

noun

young sheep

noun

English essayist (1775-1834)

See also: Lamb Elia

noun

a person easily deceived or cheated (especially in financial matters)

noun

a sweet innocent mild-mannered person (especially a child)

See also: dear

noun

the flesh of a young domestic sheep eaten as food

verb

give birth to a lamb; "the ewe lambed"