A free service provided by Writers Nexus International

Writing Resources:
  • New Novelist Software
  • Writer Circles
  • Author Me
  • FirstWriter.com
  • Novel Advice
  • Robin's Nest for Writers
  • The Scriptorium
  • Women on Writing


A Writer's Dictionary:

cut something out Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with C » curvaceous ... cv » cut something out


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
    2. To divide something by cutting.
      Form: cut something up (often)
    3. To trim (hair, nails, etc).
    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)
    7. To shape the surface of (a gem) into facets, or decorate (glass) by cutting.
    8. To shape the pieces of (a garment).
      Example: He cuts clothes so that they hang perfectly
    9. To make (a sound recording).
    10. To injure or wound with a sharp edge or instrument.
    11. To hurt.
      Example: cut someone to the heart
    12. To reduce (eg prices, wages, interest rates, working hours, etc).
    13. To shorten or abridge (eg a book or play).
      Thesaurus: edit down, condense, abridge, shorten.
    14. To delete or omit.
    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.
    18. math.
      To cross or intersect.
    19. To reject or renounce.
      Example: cut one's links with one's family
    20. informal
      To ignore or pretend not to recognize someone.
    21. To stop.
      Example: The alcoholic was told to cut his drinking or risk serious liver damage
    22. informal
      To absent oneself from something.
      Example: cut classes
    23. To switch off (an engine, etc).
    24. cricket.
      To hit (a ball) with a slicing action, causing it to spin or swerve.
    25. Said of a baby: to grow (teeth).
    intr
    26. To go off in a certain direction; to take a short route.
      Form: cut across (usually)
      Form: cut through
    27. To dilute (eg an alcoholic drink) or adulterate (a drug).
      Example: John cuts his whisky with ginger ale
      Thesaurus: weaken, dilute, adulterate, water.
    28. To divide; to partition.
      Example: a room cut in half by a bookcase
noun
    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.
    3. A reduction.
      Thesaurus: reduction, decrease, diminution, elision, omission.
    4. A deleted passage in a play, etc.
    5. The stoppage of an electricity supply, etc.
    6. slang
      One's share of the profits.
    7. A piece of meat cut from an animal.
    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.
Idiom: a cut above something
    colloq
    Superior to it.
      Thesaurus: superior to, higher than, better than, more efficient than, more capable than, more competent than.
Idiom: cut and dried
    Decided; definite; settled beforehand.
      Thesaurus: fixed, settled, routine, prearranged, predetermined, sewn up.
Idiom: cut and run
    colloq
    To escape smartly.
Idiom: cut and thrust
    Aggressive competition; quick verbal exchange or repartee.
Idiom: cut both ways
    To have advantages and disadvantages; to bear out both sides of an argument.
Idiom: cut someone dead
    To ignore them completely.
Idiom: cut it fine
    colloq
    To have or leave barely enough time, space, etc for something.
Idiom: cut it out
    slang
    To stop doing something bad or undesirable.
Idiom: cut out for something (cut out to be something)
    Having the qualities needed for it.
      Thesaurus: suitable for, fit for, good for.
Idiom: cut something short
    To reduce or shorten it.
      Thesaurus: diminish, abbreviate, abridge, shorten.
Idiom: cut someone short
    To silence them by interrupting.
Idiom: cut up
    colloq
    Distressed; upset.
Idiom: cut up rough
    colloq
    To get angry and violent.
Idiom: cut a long story short
    To come straight to the point.
Idiom: half cut
    (rit)
    slang
    Drunk.
Etymology: 13c as cutten.

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.
Phrasal Verb: cut back on something
    To reduce spending, etc. See also cutback.
Phrasal Verb: cut something down
    To fell a tree, etc.
Phrasal Verb: cut down on something
    To reduce one's use of it; to do less of it.
Phrasal Verb: cut in
    To interrupt.Said of a vehicle: to overtake and squeeze in front of another vehicle.
Phrasal Verb: cut something off
    To separate or isolate it.To stop (the supply of gas, electricity, etc).To stop it or cut it short. See also cut-off.
Phrasal Verb: cut someone off
    To disconnect them during a telephone call.
Phrasal Verb: cut out
    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.
Phrasal Verb: cut something 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.
Phrasal Verb: cut someone up
    Said of the driver of a vehicle: to drive in front of (another vehicle) in a dangerous manner.


Click Here