| Erin Shepher | แอริน เชปเพอร์ The Teens, They Are a Changin' (2013) |
| shepher | The German Shepherd was limping down the street. |
| shepher | There were shepherds keeping watch over their flock. |
| shepher | The shepherd even when he become a gentleman smells of the lamb. |
| shepherd | (n) a clergyman who watches over a group of people |
| shepherd | (v) watch over like a shepherd, as a teacher of her pupils |
| shepherd | (v) tend as a shepherd, as of sheep or goats |
| shepherd dog | (n) any of various usually long-haired breeds of dog reared to herd and guard sheep, Syn. sheepdog, sheep dog |
| shepherdess | (n) a woman shepherd |
| shepherd's pie | (n) pie of hash covered with mashed potatoes and browned in the oven |
| shepherd's purse | (n) white-flowered annual European herb bearing triangular notched pods; nearly cosmopolitan as an introduced weed, Syn. shepherd's pouch, Capsella bursa-pastoris |
| Shepherd | n. [ OE. schepherde, schephirde, AS. sceáphyrde; sceáp sheep + hyrde, hirde, heorde, a herd, a guardian. See Sheep, and Herd. ]
|
| Shepherd | v. t. White, fleecy clouds . . . [ 1913 Webster ] Shepherded by the slow, unwilling wind. Shelley. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Shepherdess | n. A woman who tends sheep; hence, a rural lass. [ 1913 Webster ] She put herself into the garb of a shepherdess. Sir P. Sidney. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Shepherdia | n.; |
| Shepherdish | n. Resembling a shepherd; suiting a shepherd; pastoral. Sir T. Sidney. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Shepherdism | n. Pastoral life or occupation. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Shepherdling | n. A little shepherd. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Shepherdly | a. Resembling, or becoming to, a shepherd; pastoral; rustic. [ R. ] Jer. Taylor. [ 1913 Webster ] |