Everything starts with a 1-dimensional point and how to specify it's position. It's physical position in our 3 dimensional universe can be located with 3 coordinates. An "object" is merely a large collection of 1-dimensional points. But 3 dimensions are all we need to locate all these points, the object.
Then there is time, which is merely a new set of locations for an object in relative motion to the observer. If you want to call it a 4th dimension, fine. But suppose the object and the observer are rigidly tied together. If their material properties remain unchanged and if the only thing the observer can observe is the other object, then time is standing still for the observer.
To more fully define reality, we need more attributes. For example, suppose we define a material's transition through time by it changing color (such as copper oxidizing). Now we have another "dimension" if we want to call it that. The dimension of color. Perhaps we have a camera that only sees a particular shade. Then color is a "dimension" to that camera. An object with a different color will be an object in "another dimension".
So while there are lots of attributes, or dimensions, like time and temperature and color, you asked about shape dimensions. You can define more shape dimensions, such as the curls in string theory, but they are unnecessary. Only 3 dimensions are necessary to locate an object in 3 dimensional space. With strings, we can define more dimensions to make the math easier, but any point on a quantum string can still be located if you know it's location in 3 directions.