How To Use Sharpen In A Sentence

  • This knife needs sharpening.
  • Sharpening his rhetoric, what they call contrasting himself with Senator Clinton before she started fighting back. CNN Transcript Dec 20, 2007
  • A blunt knife may be sharpened on a stone, but if a man is stupid there is no help for his stupidity. 
  • The judge was also shown sharpened branches and wood used to torment the youngsters. The Sun
  • But its impact on class inequality ... is to sharpen class division.
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  • A blunt knife may be sharpened on a stone, but if a man is stupid there is no help for his stupidity. 
  • She pulled a fresh pile of paper from her desk drawer, sharpened her pencil and got down to work.
  • This incident has sharpened public awareness of the economic crisis.
  • Instead of throwing the club from the top by unhinging your wrists immediately, you want to add lag by sharpening the angle created by the clubshaft and forearms.
  • I don't see anything wrong with a handguard or any other safety feature on a knife sharpener. More on Plaxico and Christmas
  • When the Boolooroo's people were armed with long, thin, lances of bluewood all sharpened to fine points at one end, they prepared to march once more against the invaders. Sky Island: being the further exciting adventures of Trot and Cap'n Bill after their visit to the sea fairies
  • Post sharpener - puts a chamfered end on wooden posts. What Is It? Game 112 » E-Mail
  • Try 'sharpen', if available ('unsharp mask' is even better, as it subtly outlines edges). Times, Sunday Times
  • It has also sharpened up the driving experience. Times, Sunday Times
  • But golf officials suspected that some club faces had been resharpened and were often verging on illegality.
  • It promotes reflexes, sharpens skills at the net and simply makes you a better, more aggressive player. Times, Sunday Times
  • This could cause wrong results for - convolve, - blur, - sharpen, and other algorithms which use these functions. Softpedia - Windows - All
  • He chased his tail and ate May's ferns, and sharpened his tiny claws on the kitchen chair legs, and left a light layer of ginger fur everywhere he went.
  • Baxter admitted he was not pleased with the previous day's training, where too many players showed their poor finishing during a lengthy session devoted to shooting practice, in which he tried to sharpen matters up in front of goal.
  • They may only be carving fruit and vegetables, but these precision instruments need sharpening every week and the useful life of the knives in his hands is only six weeks.
  • She was Karving her initials on the moose with the sharpened end of an interspace toothbrush given her by Svenge – her brother-in-law – an Ma baloney haz a furst name… - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • It will also sharpen questions over the scale of spending cuts needed. Times, Sunday Times
  • Marx sharpened and deepened this concept, and then used it to explore capitalism's class relations and internal dynamics.
  • With urbanisation the antagonism between rich and poor sharpened.
  • WOLF BLITZER, CNN ANCHOR: Happening now, Barack Obama sharpening his criticism of Hillary Clinton, what he calls her flawed judgment. CNN Transcript Oct 11, 2007
  • On the outer edges of the sword was shining steel, sharpened to a fine point.
  • I then decided that, while the designated keyboard-defluffing penknife should best stay blunt, my other penknives could do with sharpening. Times, Sunday Times
  • She assembles a bow with a string on it, and sharpens a cylindrical spindle of lime wood, then inserts it into a notched hole in a flat piece of wood she holds with her foot.
  • A horrendous smirk of a smile polluted Jen's bruised face as her fingers sharpened into pointed razor claws.
  • This time the predicament is a different one and knives are being sharpened. Archive 2008-06-01
  • (voice-over): Not lost here is that Barack Obama was the first campaign to go on the offensive, sharpening his rhetoric, what they call contrasting himself with Senator Clinton, before she started fighting back. CNN Transcript Dec 20, 2007
  • My grandpa used to carry a big folding Stockman knife, with old fashioned bone handles and blades worn thin from sharpening.
  • He used a makeshift whetstone to sharpen both blades again.
  • The addition of Creed, Donald and Friedman will sharpen the weapons available to the team as they again pursue a number of racing blocks in Europe and Asia. Donald, Friedman join Creed at Kelly Benefit Strategies for 2011
  • Was originally a fine pencil sharpener!
  • The resulting increase in production should sharpen the instructional focus of the materials.
  • He ruffled some feathers by suggesting ‘if blogging is to go mainstream, bloggers will have to sharpen their act up considerably’.
  • They were able to deploy facts and figures to sharpen the journalism, challenging those politicians who spoke in pre-fabricated slabs of argument.
  • Their loud voices were beginning to irritate me and I could feel my headache sharpen.
  • With braillewriters ready, laptops open, and pencils sharpened, more than 45 students with visual impairments will participate in the Tenth Annual Technology Olympics.
  • Our exteroceptive senses transform this information into nerve signals, and the signals are analyzed, sharpened, and interpreted by our brain. Cosmic Symphony: A Deeper Look at Quantum Consciousness
  • This broad and undulating ridge gradually narrows and eventually sharpens to a knife edge just below the rocky summit slopes.
  • Evolution sharpens and refines their ability to lie about themselves.
  • Comparison of the UK rate of spinal surgery with that in other countries shows that UK surgeons are not sharpening their scalpels to the ringing of cash tills.
  • - Sharpening of the saw (filing of the teeth) · Select a three-square file with a cross-section that is equal to the form of the tooth space. 4. Sharpening of Sawing Tools
  • Again he experienced the heightened awareness and sharpening of the senses, which always accompanied his bestial transformation into a primal killer.
  • A sharpening nip to the wind made me look south, where a familiar pearling of the sky and darkening of sea showed that the ferryman's prophecy was set to come true.
  • Unless the slope of the baseline drift is very steep the decline has few practical consequences except to sharpen competitive pressures.
  • He gets most things right and sharpens his eyes and reflexes by playing table tennis. The Sun
  • Patroclus sharpened the carving-knife on the kitchen stove, and they all went out into the potato field.
  • A blunt knife may be sharpened on a stone, but if a man is stupid there is no help for his stupidity. 
  • He pressed something with his thumb and the device fizzed loudly, electric blue light dancing between the sharpened points of the claw. CHAMELEON
  • Tell him that you are sharpening up your act by keeping your shops and guest houses clean and opening the cafe even when a coach party arrives 10 minutes after closing time.
  • This designation shows the beginnings of organization and sharpening skills of the children.
  • I've also honed my design skills, and maybe even sharpened up my writing skills.
  • Roast butternut risotto In this risotto, roasted butternut is sharpened with lemon and sage and finished with squishy tomatoes and parmesan. Times, Sunday Times
  • Draw a rough smudged line then sharpen with a cotton bud and Vaseline. The Sun
  • The dig has already uncovered a whet stone, which would have been used for sharpening knives, and a piece of a pottery jug dated back to at least the 17th century.
  • A series of attacks have sharpened fears of more violence.
  • Bollywood has the best paean to these knifey heroes in Jaya Bhaduri's knife-sharpener cameo in the 1973 hit 'Zanjeer.' Boing Boing
  • Graphics have been sharpened slightly, but the racing courses are the same, and with minor exceptions, so are the vehicles.
  • Stabilize tools for sharpening by bracing them against a solid surface or clamping them in a vise.
  • Sharpening a European scythe is a combination of hammering (called peening) and honing with a whetstone.
  • A blunt knife may be sharpened on a stone, but if a man is stupid there is no help for his stupidity. 
  • Unless the slope of the baseline drift is very steep the decline has few practical consequences except to sharpen competitive pressures.
  • At this very moment, exam markers are sharpening their red pencils to ring such sloppiness.
  • Like almost all of Elsheimer's paintings, this story-within-a-landscape is small, just 12¼ inches by 16¼ inches, and painted on copper, whose smooth, nonporous surface intensifies the luminosity of the oil paint, makes his colors sparkle, and sharpens his minute details. The Story Within a Landscape
  • She caught his eye, and her faculties, sharpened by the imminent peril, read relentment there. Colonel Quaritch, V.C. A Tale of Country Life
  • The tools are made by the tribals themselves from finely sharpened bamboo.
  • For the first purpose it is seldom mounted with a sharp "Point of War" and never sharpened for the purpose of recreating a medieval joust .
  • Larger whetstones for sharpening iron tools were an important part of everyday equipment and were widely traded, especially since varying degrees of coarseness were required to produce a finely honed edge.
  • He was not happy with the strange inflections of the melodies, with their flattened 7ths and sharpened 6ths, and he was even more perplexed by the words: he had little English to begin with and the rustic archaisms only added to the problem.
  • During the rigged tournament, Claudius and Laertes give Hamlet a blunted sword while Laertes' weapon is sharpened and poisoned.
  • Video: how to sharpen a knife and cut an onion thetimes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Anne sharpened her pencil and got out her homework.
  • Blade sharpening is important, too, because dull edges will rip the grass open and leave vascular tissue vulnerable to disease.
  • And he got that whet rock, an oilstone, and sharpened his knife just like a razor. Oral History Interview with Geddes Elam Dodson, May 26, 1980. Interview H-0240. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • Nobody knows what will come out then, but press reporters are polishing their biros and TV cameramen are sharpening their lenses. YESTERDAY'S SHADOW
  • He sharpens them and uses them as deadly weapons.
  • For comparison, it sharpens finely enough to cut phone-book paper, but you have to really work at getting a good edge.
  • Education is the best weapon against ignorance. Learning is the best way to sharpen the mind. Dr T.P.Chia 
  • We also need to sharpen our proposition and make sure our service standards are consistently delivered. Times, Sunday Times
  • Many cutting tools were sharpened with strickles or whetstones.
  • A blunt knife may be sharpened on a stone, but if a man is stupid there is no help for his stupidity. 
  • Nitpicking aside, the new approach seems to have sharpened their pop instincts. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rather, it’s the misguided conviction that alcohol facilitates the act of writing, emboldens the imagination, sharpens wits, and performs many other useful functions in abetting the bardic spirit. Wislawa szymborska | how to (and how not to) write poetry « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground
  • WHITFIELD: And, and you also hear the argument that as they tried to, you know, kind of sharpen their positions, what they're also doing is sharpening a divide, a divide among Democrats and maybe even Independents? CNN Transcript Jan 19, 2008
  • Bank of America has for the past year been selling what it calls noncore assets as it looks to both raise capital to meet new global standards and sharpen its focus on its core banking business. Bank of America, Blackstone in Deal Talks
  • It would only be a moment before it sharpened its needlelike claws and took hold. Falling In
  • Graphics have been sharpened slightly, but the racing courses are the same, and with minor exceptions, so are the vehicles.
  • Vendors offered services such as knife sharpening, cigarette lighter repair, and bike inner-tube patching from makeshift, cloth-covered wooden crates.
  • Draw a rough smudged line then sharpen with a cotton bud and Vaseline. The Sun
  • In addition to sharpening methods the guide also talks about the different types of steel used in knives and which hold an edge better than others. Learn To Sharpen Good Knives With Water Stones | Lifehacker Australia
  • Cornelia figured to him while he walked away as, by contrast and opposition, a massive little bundle of data; his impatience to go to see her sharpened as he thought of this: so certainly should he find out that wherever he might touch her, with a gentle though firm pressure, he would, as the fond visitor of old houses taps and fingers a disfeatured, overpapered wall with the conviction of a wainscot-edge beneath, recognise some small extrusion of history. The Finer Grain
  • A common response to such an acausal happening is a sharpening of attention, a sense of the closeness of something unseen.
  • After a short while, in fact several times a day, he has to resharpen the chisels on a rotary grinding wheel he's acquired.
  • A blunt knife may be sharpened on a stone, but if a man is stupid there is no help for his stupidity. 
  • On opposite sides of the country today, the presumptive presidential nominees will once again sharpen their positions on how to manage the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan if elected. The Early Word: 2 Candidates, 2 Visions for Iraq - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
  • Shoving books onto the floor, I finally found a clean piece of paper and a sharpened pencil.
  • They're not "wet stones" but rather "whetstones" as in "whet: to make keen or more acute;" whet my appetite "; to sharpen by rubbing, as on a whetstone Learn To Sharpen Good Knives With Water Stones | Lifehacker Australia
  • It is a good middle-of-the-road steel and is perfect for hunting knives like this due to its ability to hold an edge and its ease of resharpening.
  • A blunt knife may be sharpened on a stone, but if a man is stupid there is no help for his stupidity. 
  • This meant you could get up and go over to the other side of the room and lollygag around in the line for sharpening pencils.
  • In March 1777 he became one of Washington's aides-de-camp, an experience that sharpened his criticism of the weak Articles of Confederation government.
  • R.: an ordinary clipboard and a sharpened yellow pencil.
  • Our cat likes to sharpen her claws on the legs of the dining table.
  • I do not have a pencil sharpener, but I have a knife.
  • A sharp knife is key, but for all this said, unless you have a true appreciation for materials, need a survival knife, need resistance to salt water, or need a knife that will cut long before sharpening, it is hard to go wrong when you buy a good brand name knife and diamond sharpening stones. Which is a better material for a knife, high carbon steel or stainless steel?
  • Our cat likes to sharpen her claws on the legs of the dining table.
  • Then he put the bent bradawl next to them, and the sharpened chisel. Persuader
  • Absence sharpens love, presence strengthens it. 
  • Astronomers speculate that M51's spiral structure is primarily due to its gravitational interaction with a smaller galaxy just off the top of this digitally sharpened image.
  • Yes, my neurological examination technique had lacked precision, and I made a note to sharpen it up.
  • In my opinion, there was absolutely nothing wrong with wanting to sharpen up a skill.
  • If you call sharpening pencils and emptying the wastepaper baskets a job. AFTERMATH
  • Auto Sharpen analyzes photos and corrects common focus problems, such as blurriness caused by poor camera focus Adobe Blogs
  • Juliet Dunn is another designer who has sharpened up the caftan by using diamanté or sequins alongside the expected swirls of embroidery.
  • The outline of the trees sharpened as it grew lighter.
  • I immediately hunched over the old manual pencil sharpener and furiously cranked that handle.
  • He thought of Snoot sitting at his kitchen table sharpening an eight-point handsaw - razor sharp - proud of it, eager to use it well. KING OF THE MOUNTAIN
  • I 'sharpen' my hunting knife with a Lansky stone set but I don't with my butcher knives, they're just too long bladed and wear out the stones. More on Plaxico and Christmas
  • His gait was feeble, his form attenuated, his countenance had lost its ruddy glow, -- the lines had sharpened until their youthful, healthful roundness was wholly obliterated; but the nervous, untranquil expression had passed away from his face, and the restless glancing from side to side had left his eyes. Fairy Fingers A Novel
  • Exercise will give you a sharpening figure back.
  • By the way, a diamond hone is the ideal tool for sharpening in camp.
  • This is their characteristic diplomacy -- the fruit of generations of sharpening wits against savages; and the same is called Kaffir cunning, and is not understood at first by European people. The Transvaal from Within A Private Record of Public Affairs
  • She'd have us take walks to the railroad to sharpen our observational skills.
  • With a touch imperceptible as dewfall, she touched her brother's mind and sharpened his inner longing with restlessness. Stormwarden
  • He would sharpen a knife for a full five minutes before carving the roast.
  • He said O'Donnell's only experience is in "sharpening the partisan divide but not at bridging it. Christine O'Donnell Questions Separation Of Church <![CDATA[&]]> State (VIDEO)
  • These tapes would then be used by other crew EWOs interested in sharpening their listening and signal interpretation skills. Osborne, Edwin N. Jr.
  • The cold of night is sharpened by the disappearance of the surface winds.
  • The pure process of cycling undoubtedly brings about a much closer relationship with the countryside, and sharpens one's senses of hearing and smell.
  • Keep in mind that these examples are actualy very oversharp, and wouldn't look good after being scaled up to fullscreen, realistically this source doesn't need such strong sharpening. Doom9's Forum
  • The company claims the handling has been sharpened up considerably.
  • The colter needed sharpening and there was a crack in the whippletree. The Boat of a Million Years
  • Sharpen only the beveled side of a blade, though you should remove burrs on the flat side.
  • The moon sharpens your intuition and turns what seem to be lucky guesses into winning answers. The Sun
  • This site actually tries to "sharpen" the noise and improve the information signal. There is such a thing as Information Overkill and why we need to fight Information Pollution | ultraorange.net
  • Men armed with sharpened bamboo sticks led the charge.
  • SF-QZJ Slitter rewinder band, supporting the use of washcloth machine, according to the required length, width, slitting automatically sharpening, an engage in activities platen device.
  • A knife is sharpened on the grindstone; steel is tempered in fire.
  • But the shoulders have widened and the appetite for victory sharpened by a few years' reflection on the might-have-beens.
  • Knives can be sharpened by grinding them against a rough stone.
  • She sharpened the meat carving knife on a whetstone.
  • Juan de Lyone's eyes glinted in anticipation as he watched his men, they scattered the deck in no real order, sharpening weapons and fixing cutlasses and daggers to their belts.
  • Familiarising new products among consumers goes a long way in sharpening their across-the-counter salesmanship.
  • I can sharpen the edge back to what it was before, and repolish the blade itself, but all my work will be for naught if you don't clean it every now and then.
  • The Cold War nuclear stand-off did much to sharpen Kubrick's awareness of global politics.
  • If you're still with me, be prepared to sharpen both your pencils and your little gray cells.
  • And forgotten, too, the sharpened jut of his cheekbones and his chin, and the thinning high arch of his nose.
  • I've seen a lot of these complaints and criticisms before, and even voiced a few myself, just never sharpened to this kind of shiv-point or stuck in quite so mercilessly. Archive 2009-08-30
  • Her whole nature seemed sharpened and intensified into a pure dart of hate.
  • Chess has helped to sharpen the mind for centuries and may explain how today's regime is plotting its next move to become a superpower. Times, Sunday Times
  • He would sharpen a knife for a full five minutes before carving the roast.
  • The road is slippery on the high ground hard by, and it is debated at Lisselan House whether the farrier of the Dragoon Guards shall not be asked to "sharpen" the shoes of the animals employed there, for no local workman will touch them. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • While the bands in punk's first wave (like the Sex Pistols and the Clash) did little more than take Chuck Berry riffs and push some safety pins through them, the British art students who formed Wire sharpened and reduced the guitars (and the half-minute outbursts that qualified as songs) into shivs instead. Disco Donors, Punk Pioneers
  • One or two of the gang climbed the banks to discover if any bailiffs were on the watch; while the others sat down, and with the help of the turnip lantern "busked" their spears; in other words, fastened on the steel -- or, it might be, merely pieces of rusty iron sharpened into a point at home -- to the staves. Auld Licht Idyls
  • WOLF BLITZER, CNN ANCHOR: Happening now, Barack Obama sharpening his criticism of Hillary Clinton and what he calls her flawed judgment. CNN Transcript Oct 11, 2007
  • The judge was also shown sharpened branches and wood used to torment the youngsters. The Sun
  • A blunt knife may be sharpened on a stone, but if a man is stupid there is no help for his stupidity. 
  • Its satirical edge was sharpened by the deafening volume. Times, Sunday Times
  • One day, therefore, she called hither her son, Love (Cupid, some name him), and bade him sharpen his weapons. Good Stories for Holidays
  • He needs to sharpen up before the Olympic trials.
  • It's a ceramic sharpener that's capable of touching up even serrated edges.
  • Very few blades show signs of having been resharpened.
  • He nodded and continued sharpening swords with whetstones.
  • Patroclus sharpened the carving-knife on the kitchen stove, and they all went out into the potato field.
  • Instead of sharpening the edge of competitive avarice, it tended to blunt it. IN DEFENCE OF ARISTOCRACY
  • Some of the items, like erasers and pencil sharpeners, shaped and coloured like fruits and vegetables, were much in demand.
  • It wasn't quite like the bronzed boys of Melaque sharpening their skimboard skills in the waters farther north. Mexico's endless Pacific beach: sun, surf, sand, seafood and solitude
  • Each case has been filled with much needed resources for the children including pens, pencils, rubbers, rulers and pencil sharpeners.
  • the second baseman sharpened his spikes before every game
  • Your ambitions are sharpened by the new moon. The Sun
  • August 26, 2008 at 8:08 am kitteh nawt likez been called “dumb” & iz uzin file 2 sharpen himz sharpy-pointy bitz eben moar be4 launchin himzsef atz mr. captan weiner fer 2 debate dat remarkz. “kitteh” iz so word. - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • Video: how to sharpen a knife and cut an onion thetimes. Times, Sunday Times
  • We work well together and the partnership is sharpening up all the time.
  • All carbide blades can be resharpened professionally, yielding an extremely long working life.
  • (voice-over): Not lost here is that Barack Obama was the first campaign to go on the offensive -- sharpening his rhetoric, what they call contrasting himself with Senator Clinton before she started fighting back. CNN Transcript Dec 21, 2007
  • He remembers putting nails on a railroad track so the train could forge them into flat blades that he could sharpen into some semblance of a cutting implement.
  • With sharpened scythes and pitchforks, with pointed staves and heavy truncheons and ironshod clubs, they killed the miserable Germans all day long, and the line of escape was marked along the Beauvoisine road by corpses almost to The Story of Rouen
  • The chasseur was a tall, meagre, swarthy Spaniard or mulatto, lightly clad in cotton shirt and drawers, with broad straw hat, and moccasins of raw-hide; his belt sustaining his long, straight, flat sword or _machete_, like an iron bar sharpened at one end; and he wore by the same belt three cotton leashes for his three dogs, sometimes held also by chains. Black Rebellion Five Slave Revolts
  • Instead of sharpening the edge of competitive avarice, it tended to blunt it. IN DEFENCE OF ARISTOCRACY
  • Your ruling planet Mercury sharpens your mind and you see your life in a much clearer light. The Sun
  • Clare's kindness sharpened his awareness of the differences between them.
  • The word cos is Latin for whetstone, a stone for sharpening razors and tools.
  • The announcement by Shamuyarira sharpens the threatening showdown between President Robert Mugabe, in the midst of a campaign to "indigenise" the economy, and the multinational companies that dominate the country's economy, who regard the government's directives as serious interference in private business. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • In digital world an image becomes numerical data, so it can be subjected to mathematical manipulations that correspond to color-correction, sharpening, desaturation, distortion to give a wide-lens effect, the addition of a background. The Nature of Technology
  • Likewise, contemporary comparatist discussions of cultural alterity may blur rather than sharpen historical distinctions and our sense of the otherness of the past.
  • To rank image search results, Ask Jeeves measures their "authoritativeness" within their "topic community," and it employs image-recognition technologies to sharpen the relevance, according to the company. Ask.com's image search
  • His the scepter, His the throne, they moved to their positions as if hovering — or, better, as if gliding on sharpened metal edges across a frozen pond.
  • Angry anglers can stop sharpening their gaffs in anticipation of a major battle on the Lakes of Killarney.
  • When we were back in our room again, with the table against the door, I took out the whetstone and sharpened the man-side of the blade, honing its edge until the endmost third, the part I would use, would divide a thread tossed into the air. The Shadow of the Torturer
  • Delight in the boy can only be sharpened by the pathos and irony of his condition of becomingness.
  • Sharpening your axe will not delay your job of cutting wood.
  • The foreignness sharpened his wonderful gift for description, the intensely alive portrayal of character, what he called ‘the experience of the encounter’.
  • Shelley may have sharpened his quills, topped off the inkwell.
  • Carvers' chisels differ from carpentry chisels in the way they are sharpened.
  • I long to own a sword of my own, with handgrips made of sharkskin and a blade that I have sharpened to a point where it could cut through this cherry blossom tree in two swipes of the blade.
  • Use the next page to list all your scissors and shears, when they were sharpened and new ones you need.
  • The large upright stone also bears the marks of where new adze heads were ground and sharpened.

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