English English Dictionary

English - English

Sharp in English:

1. intelligent intelligent


He's intelligent.
He's just a normal junior high school student, not particularly intelligent.
Certainly he is handsome and intelligent, but there is something about him that I can't like.
You're beautiful and intelligent, how is it possible that no man is chasing after you?
The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.
There is no such thing as the right speed for intelligent reading.
The habits of highly intelligent people offer a clue as to how to do that.
I think it is certain that there is intelligent life in this universe, but the likelihood of that life coming to Earth is practically nil.
Some scientists think that dolphins are the most intelligent animals in the world except for man, and that we may be able to talk with them one day.
Are people born intelligent or stupid, or is intelligence the result of how you live?
Dr. Patterson: Not at all! Koko has taught us that gorillas are intelligent enough to learn sign language.
It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.
Most of the people I met were intelligent, mature and personable.
Intelligent equipment has replaced manual labor.

English word "Sharp"(intelligent) occurs in sets:

Sprawdzian 2A i 2B

2. precisely precisely


Please come here at 3 o'clock precisely.
That's precisely my point
I’ve got almost precisely the research grant I’d hoped for
We'll meet again at precisely 1 o'clock.
Precisely!
But, knowing precisely sadness and love and death, and that they are vain images when we observe them from the calm space where we should shut ourselves in, he kept on weeping, and desiring love, and fearing death.
But the person in charge is there precisely to take responsibility.
An inch is now precisely 2.54 centimeters.
Do not forget to acknowledge sources precisely.
Answer the questions precisely and accurately.
This is precisely the kind of thing I was hoping to avoid.
The fireworks begin at eight o'clock precisely. "It would be stupid to attempt the journey in the dark." "Precisely!" he answered.
The low price was precisely the reason why I chose this trip.
That's precisely what I meant. She pronounced the word very slowly and precisely.
Clava loves all things irrational, and works at the kindergarten for precisely that reason.

3. sharpen sharpen


Sharpen your pencil.
I want a knife to sharpen my pencil with.
What objects can be sharpened when they become blunt? Pencils can be sharpened when they become blunt.
Ted knew that the only way to sharpen his computer skills was to go to evening classes.
the marketization of everything sharpens the sting of inequality
Make sure you sharpen your pencils before the test begins.
to make a feeling stronger and more urgent: A series of attacks have sharpened fears of more violence.
I have to sharpen this knife. It's too dull.
You have to sharpen a blunt pencil.
My admiration for the professionals has sharpened considerably.
May I sharpen my pencil?