Relating to the Orange Order.
A city in the Vaucluse department, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France.
A town in New Hampshire; named for the orange ochre found in the area.
An unincorporated community in Georgia.
The Orange River (the longest river in South Africa)
An unincorporated community in Coshocton County, Ohio.
A city, the county seat of Orange County, Texas.
A city in Orange County, California; named for the fruit.
An unincorporated community in Illinois.
A town in Connecticut; named for William III of England.
An unincorporated community in Indiana; named for its township, itself named for Orange County, North Carolina.
A town, the county seat of Orange County, Virginia.
A town in Wisconsin.
The City of Orange, a local government area in central New South Wales, Australia.
An unincorporated community in Delaware County, Ohio.
A town in Vermont.
Prince or Princess of Orange. Title of the first-born to the Dutch Royal House.
a Loyalist or a member of the Orange Order; someone, usually a Protestant, who advocates keeping Northern Ireland under British control.
An unincorporated community in Missouri.
A town in New York.
A city in New South Wales; named for William II of the Netherlands, Prince of Orange from 1815 to 1840.
A city in New Jersey; named for William III of England, Prince of Orange from 1650 to 1702.
A town in Massachusetts; named for William III of England.
A village in Cuyahoga County, Ohio.
Intelligent.
Higher in pitch than required.
Having an intense, acrid flavour.
Offensive, critical, or acrimonious.
Forming a small angle; especially, forming an angle of less than ninety degrees.
Steep; precipitous; abrupt.
Eager or keen in pursuit; impatient for gratification.
Terminating in a point or edge, especially one that can cut easily; not obtuse or rounded.
Illegal or dishonest.
Higher than usual by one semitone (denoted by the symbol ♯ after the name of the note).
Keenly or unduly attentive to one's own interests; shrewd.
Tactical; risky.
Composed of hard, angular grains; gritty.
Said of as extreme a value as possible.
Exact, precise, accurate; keen.
Piercing; keen; severe; painful.
Stylish or attractive.
Sudden and intense.
Observant; alert; acute.
To play tricks in bargaining; to act the sharper.
To raise the pitch of a note half a step making a natural note a sharp.
A note that is sharp in a particular key.
Something that is sharp.
A dishonest person; a cheater.
Fine particles of husk mixed with coarse particle of flour of cereals; middlings.
A note that is played a semitone higher than usual; denoted by the name of the note that is followed by the symbol ♯.
A sharp tool or weapon.
A sharpie (member of Australian gangs of the 1960s and 1970s).
The scale having a particular sharp note as its tonic.
Part of a stream where the water runs very rapidly.
A sewing needle with a very slender point, more pointed than a blunt or a between.
The symbol ♯, placed after the name of a note in the key signature or before a note on the staff to indicate that the note is to be played a semitone higher.
A hypodermic syringe.
To a point or edge; piercingly; eagerly; sharply.
Exactly.
In a higher pitch than is correct or desirable.