Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(1)
The phrase "a sharp shock to" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a sudden and intense impact or realization that affects someone emotionally or psychologically.
Example: "The news of the company's bankruptcy was a sharp shock to the employees, leaving them in disbelief."
Alternatives: "a sudden jolt to" or "an abrupt impact on".
Exact(2)
That lays the groundwork for a bankruptcy procedure and should be a sharp shock to Detroit.
Whatever edition is used, though the essential humanity and parodistical breadth of Candide remains, a work whose brittle, cynical veneer falls away in the final 20 minutes to deliver a sharp shock to the solar plexus.
Similar(58)
Harry Sidebottom fairly presumes you wouldn't know a hoplite if one thrust a spear at you, and that you grasped legionary tactics from watching the DVD of Gladiator: he uses our instinctive understanding of what has been sold since classical Greece as the "western way of war" as the basis for a boot camp for the brain - a short, sharp shock to presumptions.
And he would not agree with those calling for a "short, sharp shock" to the economy.
It works as a short, sharp shock to anyone who would take us back to these times.
"We thought this might give a short, sharp shock to people who don't clean up after their dogs.
This short, sharp shock to Balotelli could be a turning point in his life.
Perhaps that short, sharp shock to the system was needed by a Sunderland side that seemed to be sleepwalking toward its own demise as a top-level team.
Academics write confidently about politics, but they tangle directly with the political world at their peril, and Blake received a sharp shock in 1987 when he agreed to stand against Roy Jenkins and Edward Heath for the Oxford University chancellorship.
This scheme can solve hyperbolic equations with third-order accuracy in time and space and capture a sharp shock wave very well with the smaller grid number and less diffusion.
Officers can fire two electrified darts from several feet away, delivering a sharp shock that freezes someone's muscles and temporarily incapacitates them.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com