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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a sharp blade" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used to describe a specific type of blade, emphasizing its sharpness. Example: "He carefully wielded a sharp blade as he carved intricate designs into the wood."
Exact(59)
"I wanted a sharp blade, I just had the idea.
It gets dangerous opening a DVD, requiring a sharp blade and a steady hand.
Literary hatchet jobs are the application of a sharp blade to a distended reputation.
The silent give of a sharp blade against a wooden board is far more satisfying.
I now find it really satisfying cutting through good wood with a sharp blade.
This book, I believe, is the first thing by Crumb ever published without a single image of flying sperm or a sharp blade approaching male genitalia.
The point about slitting its throat with a sharp blade is that we take personal responsibility for what we are doing.
There appeared to be seventeen such scratches, made by a sharp blade, through the eyes, the nose, and the mouth, as if someone — possibly a Catholic partisan — had tried to obliterate the face.
To cut through the muscle at the base of the shell and pry open the oyster, you need a knife with a good grip and a sharp blade with a slightly curved tip.
An actor performing a suicide scene in a play in Austria accidentally stabbed himself in the neck when his prop knife was replaced with a sharp blade, The Associated Press reported.
Colonies of small weeds are quickly done in with a winged weeder, colinear hoe or some other hoe having a sharp blade that slides parallel to and just a fraction of an inch below the soil surface.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com