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  1. Dictionary
    acute
    /əˈkjuːt/

    adjective

    noun

    • 1. short for acute accent

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. ACUTE definition: 1. If a bad situation is acute, it causes severe problems or damage: 2. An acute pain or illness…. Learn more.

  3. a (1) : characterized by sharpness or severity of sudden onset. acute pain. (2) : of rapid onset and relatively short duration. acute illness. see also acute disease. (3) : being, providing, or requiring short-term medical care (as for acute disease or traumatic injury)

  4. If you say that someone is acute or has an acute mind, you mean that they are quick to notice things and are able to understand them clearly. Into her nineties, her thinking remained acute and her character forceful.

  5. Acute definition: sharp or severe in effect; intense. See examples of ACUTE used in a sentence.

  6. /əˈkjuːt/ very serious or severe. There is an acute shortage of water. acute pain. the world’s acute environmental problems. Competition for jobs is acute. The scandal was an acute embarrassment for the President. He was suffering from acute chest pains. Join us.

  7. 3 days ago · ]Ahab rapidly ordered the ship's course to be slightly altered, and the sail to be shortened. The acute policy dictating these movements was sufficiently vindicated at daybreak, by the sight of a long sleek on the sea directly and lengthwise ahead, smooth as oil, and resembling in the pleated watery wrinkles bordering it, the polished metallic-like marks of some swift tide-rip, at the mouth of a deep, rapid stream.

  8. ACUTE definition: 1. An acute problem or negative feeling is extreme: 2. An acute angle is less than 90 degrees. 3…. Learn more.

  9. Use the adjective acute for when you want to describe something as sharp or extremely serious. The word acute is one word; it's not two words, nor does it have anything to do with something small, cuddly, and pretty!

  10. 1. a. Reacting readily to stimuli or impressions; sensitive: His hearing was unusually acute. b. Keenly perceptive or discerning: an acute critic of music; a critic with acute judgment. See Synonyms at sharp. 2. Extremely sharp or severe; intense: acute pain; acute pleasure. 3.

  11. 1. You can use acute to indicate that an undesirable situation or feeling is very severe or intense. [...] 2. An acute illness is one that becomes severe very quickly but does not last very long. Compare chronic. [medicine] [...] 3. If a person's or animal's sight, hearing, or sense of smell is acute, it is sensitive and powerful. [...] More.