No. If you could, the crosses would probably exist now unless they're hidden. Also, you can only breed animals that are related to each other (dog x wolf, dog x jackal, dolphin x false killer whale, lion x tiger, llama x camel, etc. [check wikipedia.orf under "hybrid animals"]). Lambs are completely separated from dogs as they are of different orders (and families, subfamilies, genus, and species). They also have different amounts of chromosomes which is extremely unlikely to produce offspring (thought to be impossible, but is sometimes reported).
no in order for pets to breed is to have at least 2 pets that are the same type of an animal and 1 boy 1 girl in somewhere warm
no
It is a Briard, a french sheep dog.
Shelty
timmy the sheep
The Tornjak is a mountain sheep dog native to Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia.
There are a couple of breeds of sheep dogs commonly used in Australia. The Australian kelpie is a good dog for herding and guarding sheep. The border collie also herds sheep and is an excellent "eye" dog - that is, it controls the sheep by using its eyes to almost hypnotise or " set " the sheep to move in particular directions.
Great Pyrenees and the Sheep Dog. Actually several breeds are raised with sheep, so they consider the sheep to be their pack and can be left alone to guard them, but the Great Pyrenees is the main one.
puli (pulik plurel) are an old breed of Hungarian sheepdogs
no you cannot breed sheep. you can breed cows or horses, but not sheep.
It might be a soft coated wheaten terrier. Hope that helps
They are generally not a great herding breed, and are more aggressive. I guess they COULD, but I wouldn't try it. Try using a Border Collie, Australian Sheep Dog, or Australian Cattle Dog.
The Puli and the Komondor both fit that description.
Give each sheep you want to breed wheat.