cut a long story short Definition
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cut
verb cut, cutting
- tr & intr
1. To slit, pierce, slice or sever (a person or thing) using a sharp instrument.
- Thesaurus: sever, cleave, quarter, dissect, shear, behead, bisect, amputate, truncate, rive, hew, pierce, puncture, gash, wound, gouge, incise, perforate.
- Form: cut something off (also)
- Form: cut something out
- Form: cut something up (often)
4. To reap or mow (corn, grass, etc).
5. To prune (flowers or plants).
6. To make or form it by cutting.
- Form: cut something out (sometimes)
8. To shape the pieces of (a garment).
- Example: He cuts clothes so that they hang perfectly
10. To injure or wound with a sharp edge or instrument.
11. To hurt.
- Example: cut someone to the heart
13. To shorten or abridge (eg a book or play).
- Thesaurus: edit down, condense, abridge, shorten.
15. To edit (a film).
intr
16. To stop filming.
intr
17. cinema.
- Said of a film or camera: to change directly to another shot, etc.
- To cross or intersect.
- Example: cut one's links with one's family
- To ignore or pretend not to recognize someone.
- Example: The alcoholic was told to cut his drinking or risk serious liver damage
- To absent oneself from something.
- Example: cut classes
24. cricket.
- To hit (a ball) with a slicing action, causing it to spin or swerve.
intr
26. To go off in a certain direction; to take a short route.
- Form: cut across (usually)
- Form: cut through
- Example: John cuts his whisky with ginger ale
- Thesaurus: weaken, dilute, adulterate, water.
- Example: a room cut in half by a bookcase
- 1. An act of cutting; a cutting movement or stroke.
2. A slit, incision or injury made by cutting.
- Thesaurus: incision, severance, cleft, hack, slash, notch, slit.
- Thesaurus: reduction, decrease, diminution, elision, omission.
5. The stoppage of an electricity supply, etc.
6. slang
- One's share of the profits.
8. The style in which clothes or hair are cut.
9. A sarcastic remark.
10. A refusal to recognize someone; a snub.
11. A short cut.
12. A channel, passage or canal.
- colloq
Superior to it.
- Thesaurus: superior to, higher than, better than, more efficient than, more capable than, more competent than.
- Decided; definite; settled beforehand.
- Thesaurus: fixed, settled, routine, prearranged, predetermined, sewn up.
- colloq
To escape smartly.
- Aggressive competition; quick verbal exchange or repartee.
- To have advantages and disadvantages; to bear out both sides of an argument.
- To ignore them completely.
- colloq
To have or leave barely enough time, space, etc for something.
- slang
To stop doing something bad or undesirable.
- Having the qualities needed for it.
- Thesaurus: suitable for, fit for, good for.
- To reduce or shorten it.
- Thesaurus: diminish, abbreviate, abridge, shorten.
- To silence them by interrupting.
- colloq
Distressed; upset.
- colloq
To get angry and violent.
- To come straight to the point.
- (rit)
slang
Drunk.
Phrasal Verb: cut across something
- To go against (normal procedure, etc).Said of an issue, etc: to be more important than, or transcend (the barriers or divisions between parties, etc).To take a short cut through it, eg a field, etc.
- To reduce spending, etc. See also cutback.
- To fell a tree, etc.
- To reduce one's use of it; to do less of it.
- To interrupt.Said of a vehicle: to overtake and squeeze in front of another vehicle.
- To separate or isolate it.To stop (the supply of gas, electricity, etc).To stop it or cut it short. See also cut-off.
- To disconnect them during a telephone call.
- Said of an engine, etc: to stop working.Said of an electrical device: to switch off or stop automatically, usually as a safety precaution. See also cut-out.
- To remove or delete it.To clip pictures, etc out of a magazine, etc.To stop doing it.To exclude it from consideration.To block out the light or view. See also cut-out.
- Said of the driver of a vehicle: to drive in front of (another vehicle) in a dangerous manner.
story1
noun stories
- 1. A written or spoken description of an event or series of events which can be real or imaginary.
- Thesaurus: tale, myth, anecdote, narrative, legend, parable, fiction, novel, epic, saga, yarn.
3. The plot of a novel, play, film, etc. See also storyline.
4. An incident, event, etc that has the potential to be interesting, amusing, etc.
5. A news article.
6. colloq
- A lie.
- Example: the story of rock
- stories, storied, storying
1. To decorate (a pot, etc) with scenes that depict events from history, legend, etc.
adj
- To omit the finer details when telling something.
- An expression of exasperation at being fed the same, usually made-up, excuse, etc.
- It is widely said or believed.
