Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
With a Sharpie, she wrote our phone number in red.
I might have seemed a bit hard on you at times, but only for your own good, Sharpie.
Suddenly he felt the pressure of Sharpies against his back.
She began using Sharpies to draw on people in 1977.
For a typical example of his work, see the article on a 14-foot sharpie.
But for the love of hell, he had not planned to cut down Sharpies!
As of 2002, 200 million Sharpies had been sold worldwide.
"A lot of sharpies and entrepreneurs are selling the programs."
Richer than you'll ever be, Sharpie, and you know why?
Sharpie seems to have an overwhelming lead - is she elected?
Sharpie is captain; she'll stand as owner for all of us.
Fish or cut bait, Sharpie - what do you want?
You can tell from the tote board that these are not sharpies.
I asked Sharpie if she knew the history and significance of lipstick.
"Sharpie, is it cheating to ask how you mean to use this?"
I took a black Sharpie and drew a bikini top on her.
Wonder why he bothered to use a knife on Sharpies!
That's the way the business works, Sharpie, says so in the scriptures, and how are you going to stop it?
Sharpie suddenly grinned; I nodded to her to take it.
I, for one, hope to be one of those old sharpies.
"I was glad to see the Sharpie image," she said.
"It was really great to see the Sharpie brand," she repeated.
Sharpie said quickly, "Did either of you promise him a ride back to my ship?"
It's in your best interest to tell me, Sharpie.
The family had a lawyer now, a New York sharpie.
Sharpy, a red, bipedal fox who likes to outwit others for his own gain.
He's got a reputation as a sharpy."
They called you that, didn't they, Sharpy?
Clever little Sharpy, but it didn't stop you being flogged, did it?'
"Before that Flimbert sharpy realizes they've been conned!"
You can watch now, Sharpy.'
Cecil Cunningham as "Sharpy"
Sharpy Fox (1958, 3 issues)
'Bit late, aren't you, Sharpy.
'Shut the door, Sharpy.
Maxine Sharpy of Shreveport, La., was one of dozens who announced that their silver rosary chains had turned to gold.
Presently he was talking to the screening sharpy at the switchboard at Festung Washington, D.C. "Let me have General Nitz."
He is able to project his quills with pinpoint accuracy, although this inexhaustible supply of quills often end up in the rump of Sharpy or some other unsuspecting Bluffer.
According to the auction house, Mr. Bourdon bought these paintings and sculptures as gifts for his wife long before works by these artists were so widely collected that prices rose sharpy.
This was later confirmed in Graeme Sharp's book, Sharpy, My Story when he admitted both him and Ratcliffe exaggerated Jones's contact on them both to get him sent off to their pleasure.
Sidney Black, the producer: A huckster, a sharpy with a touch of the con, who is determined, in his first crack at legitimate theater, to "stick a Roman candle in the tired face of Broadway."
He counts money while a sharpy takes it from him and the voice-over denounces "the largest welfare fraud in state history" and tells of furniture thefts while the sharpy and a friend carry away furniture.
The typical Pallette role was the comically exasperated head of the family (as in My Man Godfrey and The Lady Eve), the cynical backroom sharpy (as in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington), or the gruff detective.
The posthumous son of Henry Sharpy (as he spelt the name) and Mary Balfour his wife, he was born on 1 April 1802 at Arbroath in Forfarshire; his father, a shipowner, was originally from Folkestone in Kent.