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Sharman

Sharman is a surname, and may refer to

  • Alison Sharman, British children's TV executive
  • Bill Sharman (1926–2013), U.S. basketball player and coach
  • Brenda Leithleiter Sharman, American beauty queen
  • Brett Sharman (born 1987), South African Rugby Union player
  • Charles Henry Ludovic Sharman (1881–1970), Canadian civil servant
  • Charlotte Sharman (1832–1929), English humanitarian
  • Colin Sharman, Baron Sharman (born 1943), British chairman of the Aviva Group
  • Elizabeth Sharman (born 1957), British slalom and sprint canoer
  • Daniel Sharman (born 1986), British actor
  • Helen Sharman (born 1963), British astronaut
  • H. B. Sharman (1865–1953), Canadian Biblical scholar
  • James Sharman, English television producer and sportscaster
  • Jim Sharman (born 1945), Australian film and stage director and writer
  • Jimmy Sharman (1887–1965), Australian boxing promoter
  • John Edward Sharman (1892–1917), Canadian World War I flying ace
  • John Fowler (British Army officer), whose middle name is Sharman
  • Lucy Tyler-Sharman (born 1965), Australian cyclist
  • Mark Sharman (born 1950), British broadcasting administrator
  • Ralph Sharman (1895–1918), American Major League baseball player
  • Robin Sharman (born 1979), English cyclist
  • Samuel Sharman (1879–1951), American sports shooter
  • William Sharman (born 1984), British international sprint hurdler

Sharman is also (less often) a given name, and may refer to

  • Geoffrey Sharman Dawes (1918–1996), English psychologist
  • George Lennox Sharman Shackle (1903–1992), English economist
  • Sharman Apt Russell (born 1954), American science writer
  • Sharman DiVono, science fiction novelist
  • Sharman Douglas (1928–1996), American socialite
  • Sharman Joshi (born 1979), Bollywood film actor
  • Sharman Kadish (born 1959), English historian
  • Sharman Macdonald (born 1951), Scottish playwright and mother of Keira Knightley
  • Sharman Stone (born 1951), Australian politician
  • William Sharman Crawford (1781–1861), Irish politician
Sharman (TV series)

Sharman is a British television crime drama series, broadcast on ITV1, starring Clive Owen, based on the "Nick Sharman" books written by London-based author Mark Timlin.

Usage examples of "sharman".

Gentlemen, the deceased, one Mr Trevor Sharman, 58 years old and a former Member of Parliament, also at one time the Home Secretary.

The audience all paid close attention as an unidentifiable gentleman, predominantly dressed in black overcoat and wearing a wide brimmed hat, stepped forward from the cross passage to the other platform nearest Sharman and walked purposefully towards him.

Commander realised it was he who was being asked the question, somehow the events of the last two days had affected his concentration and his mind was wandering away onto matters more connected with his ongoing Sharman investigation.

Trevor Sharman, can you tell us anything more about the progress of the investigation?

Casually he picked it up and read the front-page headline about the arrest of Garforth in the Sharman murder case as the bus continued to lurch as far as New Bond Street where it turned left and headed into the expensive quarter of the West End.

Longton continued to list the misdemeanours, Sharman lost what little remained of his cool temperament.

Television Centre into a covered driveway, Sharman spotted his official car parked opposite.

Driver looked at Sharman as though he thought he had gone nuts only to get a response in the form of a fist around the back of the neck, rendering him immediately unconscious.

Commander leaned forward with menace and stared Sharman square in the eye, only a matter of a few inches separating the two men.

Tracy too was stunned by the revelations as Sharman went on into detail about how Garforth had blackmailed him into organising the escape, the documentation and all the rest.

Men and women and children, copsiks and citizens, all clung to the cylinder wall, covering it with an inner layer of heads, while Comlink or the Sharman spoke from one end.

The Sharman says the jungle will pass the tree at an angle, about midpoint, with a klomter to spare.

Arguing that viruses obey the laws of natural selection, several Sharman biologists had proposed that the HIV virus, in its then-current genetic format, was excessively lethal.

Allowed to range unchecked, argued the Sharman team, a virus demonstrating 100 percent lethality must eventually bring about the extinction of the host organism.

The core observation cf the Sharman researchers dated from this earlier work: The virus wishes to survive, and cannot if it kills its host.