“Sharp” is an adjective when it describes a noun’s edge, sound, taste, turn, tone, or mental speed.
If you’re studying parts of speech, “sharp” is a nice word to practice with because it shows up in lots of daily sentences. You’ll see it before a noun (“a sharp knife”), after a linking verb (“the knife is sharp”), and inside set phrases (“sharp turn,” “sharp contrast”). In all those spots, it’s doing adjective work: it tells you what something is like.
This article gives you a clean way to spot “sharp” as an adjective, shows where it can act like other word types, and helps you use it correctly in school writing.
What “sharp” does as a describing word
An adjective modifies a noun or pronoun. In plain terms, it adds a detail that narrows meaning. “Sharp” fits that job well because it can describe:
- A physical edge or point: sharp scissors, sharp teeth
- A clear outline: sharp image, sharp focus
- A sudden change: sharp drop, sharp turn
- A strong taste or smell: sharp cheese, sharp vinegar
- A tone or remark: sharp reply, sharp criticism
- Mental speed: sharp student, sharp thinker
Each bullet shows the same pattern: “sharp” sits next to a noun and tells you a trait of that noun.
Is Sharp An Adjective? In daily English usage
Yes. In standard English, “sharp” is commonly an adjective. The easiest way to see it is to test whether it can answer “What kind?” about a noun.
Test 1: Put it right before a noun
If “sharp” naturally comes before a noun, that’s classic adjective placement.
- sharp knife
- sharp corner
- sharp noise
- sharp decline
Test 2: Put it after a linking verb
Adjectives often appear after linking verbs like be, seem, feel, and look. This is called a predicate adjective.
- The blade is sharp.
- That comment felt sharp.
- The photo looks sharp.
Test 3: Try a comparative or superlative form
Many adjectives form comparisons. “Sharp” can become sharper and sharpest.
- This pencil is sharper than mine.
- That chef’s knife is the sharpest one in the drawer.
These tests won’t solve every grammar puzzle, yet “sharp” passes them cleanly in most sentences you’ll meet in school books, news, and casual writing.
Meanings of “sharp” that show up most often
One reason learners get stuck is that “sharp” has several common senses. The part of speech stays the same in many cases (still an adjective), while the meaning shifts. Knowing the main senses makes reading smoother.
Edge and point: cutting or piercing
This is the sense many students learn first. A “sharp” tool has a thin edge or fine point that can cut or poke. When you write about safety or tools, this meaning is direct and concrete.
Clear and well-defined: easy to see
In photos, screens, and drawings, “sharp” can mean clear outlines and crisp detail. Writers often pair it with words like image, focus, detail, and contrast.
Sudden change: steep or abrupt
“Sharp” can describe a change that happens fast or at a tight angle: a sharp rise, a sharp bend, a sharp left. In math and science classes, you might see it used for graphs or turns in direction.
Strong taste or smell: biting or tangy
Food writing uses “sharp” for flavors that bite the tongue a bit, like aged cheddar or vinegar-based dressing. It can work for smell, too.
Tone and speech: brisk, biting, or stern
A “sharp” remark can mean a reply that stings. Context matters here, since the word can hint at rudeness, impatience, or strictness.
Mental speed: quick to notice and understand
When “sharp” describes a person, it often means quick to pick up patterns, jokes, or details. In classrooms, it can be praise, though tone still matters.
Dictionary entries group these senses under the adjective form. If you want a reliable reference, see Merriam-Webster’s entry for “sharp” and Cambridge Dictionary’s “sharp” definition.
How to use “sharp” in stronger sentences
Knowing that “sharp” is an adjective is step one. Step two is using it with the right noun so your sentence sounds natural. Here are common pairings that show up in essays and exams.
When you mean a cutting edge
- sharp blade / knife / scissors: concrete tools
- sharp shard: broken glass or pottery
- sharp tip / point: needles, thorns, hooks
When you mean clear detail
- sharp image / photo: good focus
- sharp line / outline: clear boundary
- sharp contrast: strong difference in color, style, or results
When you mean a sudden change
- sharp turn / bend: tight angle
- sharp drop / rise: steep change
- sharp shift: fast change in topic, mood, or plan
When you mean tone or speech
- sharp reply: short and biting
- sharp voice: stern sound
- sharp criticism: strong negative feedback
Notice what’s happening in each group: “sharp” is doing the same grammar job, but the noun it modifies steers the reader to the right meaning.
Common adjective uses of “sharp” at a glance
The table below groups the most common adjective senses with typical nouns and a sample sentence. Use it as a quick check while reading or writing.
| Sense | Common nouns | Sample sentence |
|---|---|---|
| Cutting edge | knife, blade, scissors | The cook set the sharp knife aside after slicing onions. |
| Pointed shape | thorn, tip, corner | Watch the sharp corner of the desk when you stand up. |
| Clear detail | image, focus, outline | The camera produced a sharp image even in low light. |
| Sudden change | turn, drop, rise | The graph shows a sharp drop after the new rule took effect. |
| Strong flavor | cheese, sauce, smell | The sharp cheese balanced the sweet apple slices. |
| Biting tone | reply, comment, criticism | His sharp reply ended the conversation. |
| Mental speed | mind, student, observer | She’s a sharp observer who spots errors fast. |
| Sound quality | ring, note, cry | A sharp ring cut through the quiet hall. |
When “sharp” is not acting as an adjective
Most of the time, you’ll meet “sharp” as an adjective. Still, English lets the same spelling do other jobs. Spotting the difference keeps your grammar labels clean.
“Sharp” as a noun in music
In music, a sharp (♯) is a symbol that raises a note by a semitone. Here “sharp” is a noun because it names a thing. You can count it and pair it with articles:
- I wrote a sharp on the F.
- The signature shows three sharps.
“Sharp” inside idioms and fixed phrases
In phrases like “at six sharp,” the word is part of an idiom meaning “exactly on time.” In grammar class, teachers may label this whole phrase as an adverbial expression, since it answers “When?” The word “sharp” itself is still best treated as part of the set phrase, not as a free-standing adjective you can move around.
“Sharp” as an adverb in informal speech
You may hear lines like “Turn sharp left” in casual talk. In formal writing, most teachers prefer an adverb form like “sharply,” or a clearer rewrite: “Make a sharp left turn.” In that rewrite, “sharp” returns to adjective duty, describing turn.
Quick ways to label “sharp” correctly
If you’re doing homework that asks you to mark parts of speech, these checks help. Use one or two, then decide.
Check the word right after “sharp”
If a noun follows (“sharp knife,” “sharp decline”), you’re looking at an adjective modifying that noun.
Check the verb before it
If you see a linking verb (“is,” “seems,” “feels”) right before “sharp,” it’s likely a predicate adjective: “The blade is sharp.”
Check whether it can take -ly
When the sentence needs an adverb, English often uses an -ly form: “She spoke sharply.” If your sentence reads better with -ly, your original “sharp” was probably standing in for an adverb.
| Clue in the sentence | Likely label | Try this rewrite |
|---|---|---|
| “Sharp” sits before a noun | Adjective | sharp pencil → The pencil is sharp. |
| “Sharp” follows a linking verb | Adjective | The sound is sharp. → sharp sound |
| It’s the music symbol ♯ | Noun | a sharp → two sharps |
| It appears in “at ___ sharp” | Set phrase | at 7 sharp → at exactly 7 |
| It modifies a verb in casual speech | Adverb role | Turn sharp. → Turn sharply. |
| It grades a change on a graph | Adjective | sharp rise → The rise is sharp. |
Small grammar details that raise your writing grade
Once you can label “sharp,” you can use it with more control. These details show up in teacher feedback.
Attributive vs predicate position
Both positions are correct, yet they feel different. “A sharp knife” feels like a label. “The knife is sharp” feels like a fresh observation. In narratives, predicate form often reads more active.
Choosing between “sharp” and “sharply”
Pick “sharp” for nouns and “sharply” for verbs and many adjectives. Compare:
- sharp change (adjective + noun)
- changed sharply (verb + adverb)
Hyphenated compounds with “sharp”
English often hyphenates adjective compounds that come before a noun. You’ll see forms like “razor-sharp blade” and “sharp-tongued comment.” Keep the hyphen when the compound sits before the noun. When it sits after a linking verb, many styles drop the hyphen: “The blade is razor sharp.”
Register: what suits school writing
In essays, “sharp” is safe and clear. When you mean “rude,” pick a more exact word if your teacher prefers precision: “snappish,” “harsh,” or “stern.” When you mean “smart,” “quick-witted” or “perceptive” may carry your meaning better. Match the word to the tone you want.
Mini practice: label “sharp” in context
Try these sentences and decide what “sharp” is doing. Then check the notes under each set.
Set A
- The knife is sharp.
- He carried a sharp tool in his bag.
- The cliff has sharp edges.
In Set A, “sharp” describes a noun directly. It’s an adjective each time.
Set B
- The meeting ended with a sharp remark.
- She gave him a sharp look.
- The teacher’s voice turned sharp.
In Set B, “sharp” still works as an adjective. The meaning shifts from edge to tone, yet the grammar job stays the same.
Set C
- Add a sharp to the note.
- At eight sharp, the bell rang.
- He turned sharp left and missed the exit.
In Set C, the first sentence uses a noun. The second uses an idiom. The third uses “sharp” in an adverb role common in speech; in formal writing, “sharply” is cleaner.
A clean takeaway you can use in class
If “sharp” describes a noun or follows a linking verb to describe a subject, label it as an adjective. If it names the ♯ symbol, it’s a noun. If it tries to modify a verb in casual speech, swap it for “sharply” in formal work.