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"sharpish" Definitions
  1. quickly; in a short time

24 Sentences With "sharpish"

How to use sharpish in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "sharpish" and check conjugation/comparative form for "sharpish". Mastering all the usages of "sharpish" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And he spoke with a voicethat was sharpish and bossy.
" The one who spoke in a voice that was "sharpish and bossy?
The wind rose again and it had personality; it was in a sharpish, meanish mood.
Dr Carhart says that people would change their minds sharpish if they or someone they loved needed a late abortion.
Realising he needed to get to his next interview sharpish, Harvey made a speedy — and highly awkward — exit from his BBC Breakfast interview.
So even if we did get some results pretty sharpish about where methane could be on Mars—and that won't be until 2017 at the earliest—it's unlikely we could target the rover to land in a new area.
Spirals — over the whole surface are strong, but unequal, rather distant, sharpish threads. Those in the sutural area are, with two or three exceptions, weaker than those elsewhere. About three at the periphery are somewhat prominent. The colour of the shell is porcelain-white under a thin yellow epidermis.
Simon Kent of The Sun-Herald said Sarah had a "waspish tongue and sharpish put down", while Tony Squires of The Sydney Morning Herald branded her "luscious." Squires' colleague Ben Pobjie wrote that everyone remembers where they were at the time they watched Karl kiss Sarah behind Susan's back.
The angulation is pinched out into a sharp round-edged keel. There are fine sharpish threads on the whole surface pretty equally distributed and of equal strength. Of these there are on the penultimate whorl below the keel about six. They are parted by flat broadish intervals, strongly scored with the lines of growth.
A little above the middle, each whorl is angulated and carinated, the carinal thread being set with small, sharpish-pointed tubercles, in which the longitudinal ribs originate. The sinus area is smooth. The rest of the surface is marked by very obsolete, depressed, rounded threads. The colour of the shell is greyish transparent white.
Most of the teeth have small carinae present on their surfaces. The dentary sypmhysis has no teeth present to either side of it for 11 mm, but forms a sharpish edge which may have been used with the premaxillary teeth 1-3 for cutting into prey. The largest teeth are found at the corners of the skull.
Spirals—about ⅔ down each whorl is a very sharp and prominent angulation. The keel thus formed is beset by numerous small, sharpish, narrow and elongated tubercles, which fail to become ribs. Of these tubercles there are about 12 on the earlier whorls, and they become more numerous on the succeeding whorls. Below this keel there is a straight-lined contraction.
The apex consists of 3½ cylindrically globose rounded whorls separated by a linearly impressed suture. They rise to a flattened top, consisting of fully 1½ whorls, in the midst of which lies the very minute and immersed tip. These whorls are coloured of a deep, rich, translucent, faintly ruddy brown.;The earliest ones, perhaps from rubbing, are glossy, but further on they are crossed by crowded, curved, sharpish, almost microscopic riblets.
Spirals —immediately below the suture is a minute collar of very small, high, round, remote tubercles, whose sutural surface at right angles to the axis is perfectly flat. This collar is strongest on the earlier whorls. Below this is a sloping, flat, or slightly concave shoulder. A little above the middle of the whorls is a rectangular angulation beset with small, remote, slightly elongated, sharpish tubercles, which give the appearance of a sharply expressed keel.
But they again diminish in number on the upper whorls. Answering to these is another double row at the top of the whorls immediately below the suture. Only in these the under thread is more prominent, and has rounded tubercles, while the upper thread is scored by longitudinally narrow sharpish little bars. Between these infrasutural threads and the carinal threads the slightly concave surface is scored by four finer threads set with little white nodules.
The length of the shell attains 5.6 mm. (Original description) The small shell is yellowish, minutely ribbed and faintly spiralled, with a small, broadish, scalar, sharp-pointed spire, a slightly swollen body whorl and rounded base, produced into a square, prominent, one- sided snout. Sculpture. Longitudinals: there are exceedingly fine, faint, microscopic scratches in the line of growth. At distances of about 1/100 of an inch apart these rise into small, sharpish, round-topped riblets, which run continuously from the suture to the snout, though on the base and below it they become feebler.
Of these there are on each row twenty to twenty-five. They are scarcely connected by a spiral thread. The periphery is sharply angulated and defined by an expressed and tubercled carina, the tubercles of which are hardly so strong as those of the second row above, which from its larger points projects quite as much as the carina. On the base there is an infracarinal furrow and three or four sharpish, equally parted, faintly tubercled, spiral threads, the inmost of which is most distinctly tubercled, and defines the umbilical depression.
Joshua Phillip Marquet (born 3 December 1969, in Melbourne, Victoria) is a former Australian cricket player, who played for Tasmania. Marquet was a sharpish fast bowler, debuting in the 1994-95 season, who opened the Tasmanian bowling attack in the late 1990s, but often proved expensive, and as a result, failed to hold down a regular berth in the side. He bowled well with the breeze from the Derwent River at his back, but was often inconsistent. He fared slightly better in domestic one-day cricket, but retired in 2004.
The suture is a rather minute, sharp, somewhat irregular line, which does not at all follow the spiral markings, but crosses these up and down in an unusually irregular manner. It is well defined by the concave hollow formed by the contraction of the whorls above and below it. The aperture is club-shaped, being somewhat angularly ovate above (with a sharpish point at the top and an angulation at the keel), and prolonged below into the somewhat oblique open siphonal canal, which is kept open by the oblique cutting away of the columella. The outer lip is sharp, but strong.
The longitudinal sculpture shows the whorls crossed from suture to suture by low, sharpish, subangulately projecting, dextrally convex, hardly oblique ribs, which run continuously, but are slightly diminishing in number, up the spire, there being about 15 on the last and 11 on the first regular whorl. On the base they bend strongly to the right, and die out at the point of the snout. They are parted by hollowed furrows which are rather broader than they. Both ribs and furrows are scratched with very fine, almost microscopic lines of growth, which coincide with the course of the ribs.
This system gradually dies out and leaves the surface smooth, only the row of infrasutural tubercles survives in an enlarged but depressed form. And springing from these some sinuous oblique and slightly irregular longitudinal puckerings appear on the body whorl, which is nearly bisected by the sharpish, slightly expressed, finely tubercled carina. This bisection of the body whorl arises from the great prolongation and tumidity of the base On this base, below the carina, are five narrow, equally parted, spiral threads, and two intra-umbilical ones, which are more contiguous. Besides this larger system of sculpture, the whole surface is covered with minute, oblique, irregular, and interrupted puckerings of the epidermis.
Abdominal scales moderate. Rostral quadrangular, broader than deep, with a median cleft above; nostril pierced between the rostral, the first labial, and three nasals, the upper much the largest and generally in contact with its fellow; 8 or 9 upper and 6 or 7 lower labials; mental moderately large, pentagonal; chin-shields 3 pairs, inner very large, elongate, outer small, frequently broken up into small scales. Femoral pores in a doubly curved line, angular in the middle, 14 to 19 on each side. Tail depressed, normally with a sharpish, minutely serrated lateral edge; its upper surface covered with very small flat scales, its lower surface generally with a median series of large transversely dilated scales.
"Skipper" received positive reviews from critics and fans. Writing for Cultbox, Sophie Davies summed up her feelings on the episode, "Next year will mark 30 years since Red Dwarf first appeared on our screens, and unless Dave commissions some sort of anniversary special sharpish, ‘Skipper’ functions perfectly well as a celebration of the show. This series finale full of nods to the past is sure to please the long-term fans, but overall it’s more than simple fan service because there are plenty of new ideas in the mix too." In a 2018 poll conducted by Red Dwarf fansite, Ganymede & Titan, "Skipper" ranked the highest of both Series XII and the entire revival series since Back to Earth, coming in at 31 out of 73 episodes.
Robert Copsey of Digital Spy said that Rochelle Humes asks in a "curious Jamaican-flecked timbre" during the intro of "What About Us". During the lyrics "Oh why are we are waiting so long I'm suffocating", and he went on to say that it is in reference to "man-related drama" and also pointing out that there is plenty of that on their reality series, Chasing the Saturdays. Copsey later went on to tip the band for their first number-one single as he said: "but we suspect it could also be a sly wink at their enduring quest for a number one single". He said that track was "radio-friendly" due to the "trace beats" and "demanding their contrary lover to give up the hard-to-get schtick sharpish".

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