verb, cut, cut⋅ting, adjective, noun | 1. | to penetrate with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument or object: He cut his finger. |
| 2. | to divide with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument; sever; carve: to cut a rope. |
| 3. | to detach with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument; separate from the main body; lop off: to cut a slice from a loaf of bread. |
| 4. | to hew or saw down; fell: to cut timber. |
| 5. | to trim by clipping, shearing, paring, or pruning: to cut hair. |
| 6. | to mow; reap; harvest: to cut grain. |
| 7. | to abridge or shorten; edit by omitting a part or parts: to cut a speech. |
| 8. | to lower, reduce, diminish, or curtail (sometimes fol. by down): to cut prices. |
| 9. | to dilute; make less thick: to cut wine. |
| 10. | to dissolve: That detergent cuts grease effectively. |
| 11. | to intersect; cross: One line cuts another at right angles. |
| 12. | Informal. to cease; discontinue (often fol. by out): Cut the kidding. Let's cut out the pretense. |
| 13. | to stop; halt the running of, as a liquid or an engine (often fol. by off): The pilot cut the engines and glided in for a landing. Cut off the hot water. |
| 14. | to dilute or adulterate (a drug) by mixing it with other substances. |
| 15. | to grow (a tooth or teeth) through the gum: The baby is cutting his teeth. |
| 16. | to type, write, or draw on (a stencil) for mimeographing. |
| 17. | to make or fashion by cutting, as a statue, jewel, or garment. |
| 18. | Glassmaking. to produce a pattern (in glass) by grinding and polishing. |
| 19. | to refuse to recognize socially; shun ostentatiously: Her friends began to cut her as the season progressed. |
| 20. | to strike sharply, as with a whip. |
| 21. | to absent oneself from: allowed to cut three classes per semester. |
| 22. | Movies, Television.
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| 23. | to wound the feelings of severely. |
| 24. | Cards.
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| 25. | to record a selection on (a phonograph record or tape); make a recording of. |
| 26. | to castrate or geld. |
| 27. | Sports. to hit (a ball) with either the hand or some instrument so as to change its course and often to cause it to spin. |
| 28. | to hollow out; excavate; dig: to cut a trench. |
| 29. | Cricket. to strike and send off (a ball) in front of the batsman, and parallel to the wicket. |
| 30. | Slang. to be a nonplaying dealer, manager, or supervisor of (a card game, crap game, or other gambling game) in return for a percentage of the money bet or sometimes for a fee. |
| 31. | to penetrate or divide something, as with a sharp-edged instrument; make an incision: The scissors cut well. |
| 32. | to admit of being cut: Butter cuts easily. |
| 33. | to pass, go, or come, esp. in the most direct way (usually fol. by across, through, in, etc.): to cut across an empty lot. |
| 34. | Movies, Television.
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| 35. | to make a sudden or sharp turn in direction; change direction suddenly; swerve: We cut to the left to avoid hitting the child. |
| 36. | to strike a person, animal, etc., sharply, as with a whip. |
| 37. | to wound the feelings severely: His criticism cut deep. |
| 38. | (of the teeth) to grow through the gums. |
| 39. | Cards. to cut the cards. |
| 40. | Informal. to leave hastily: to cut for the hills. |
| 41. | (of a horse) to interfere. |
| 42. | that has been subjected to cutting; divided into pieces by cutting; detached by cutting: cut flowers. |
| 43. | fashioned by cutting; having the surface shaped or ornamented by grinding, polishing, or the like: cut diamonds. |
| 44. | reduced by or as if by cutting: cut whiskey; cut prices. |
| 45. | Botany. incised; cleft. |
| 46. | castrated; gelded. |
| 47. | Slang. drunk. |
| 48. | the act of cutting; a stroke or a blow, as with a knife, whip, etc. |
| 49. | the result of cutting, as an incision, wound, passage, or channel. |
| 50. | a piece cut off: a cut of a pie. |
| 51. | Informal. a share, esp. of earnings or profits: His agent's cut is 20 percent. |
| 52. | a haircut, often with a styling. |
| 53. | a reduction in price, salary, etc. |
| 54. | the manner or fashion in which anything is cut: the cut of a dress. |
| 55. | style; manner; kind: We need a man of his cut in this firm. |
| 56. | a passage or course straight across or through: a cut through the woods. |
| 57. | an excision or omission of a part. |
| 58. | a part or quantity of text deleted or omitted. |
| 59. | a quantity cut, esp. of lumber. |
| 60. | a refusal to recognize an acquaintance. |
| 61. | an act, speech, etc., that wounds the feelings. |
| 62. | an engraved plate or block of wood used for printing. |
| 63. | a printed picture or illustration. |
| 64. | an absence, as from a school class, at which attendance is required. |
| 65. | Butchering. part of an animal usually cut as one piece. |
| 66. | Cards. a cutting of the cards. |
| 67. | Sports.
|
| 68. | Fencing. a blow with the edge of the blade instead of the tip. |
| 69. | one of several pieces of straw, paper, etc., used in drawing lots. |
| 70. | Movies, Television.
|
| 71. | an individual song, musical piece, or other similar material on a record or tape. |
| 72. | any product of the fractional distillation of petroleum. |
| 73. | cut across, to precede or go beyond considerations of; transcend: The new tax program cuts across party lines. |
| 74. | cut down,
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| 75. | cut in,
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| 76. | cut off,
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| 77. | cut out,
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| 78. | cut up,
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| 79. | a cut above, somewhat superior to another (thing, person, etc.) in some respect: Her work is a cut above anyone else's. |
| 80. | cut a caper or figure, to perform a spirited, brief, outlandish dance step, esp. as a result of euphoria. |
| 81. | cut a figure,
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| 82. | cut and run,
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| 83. | cut back,
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| 84. | cut both ways, to have, produce, or result in advantages as well as disadvantages: This decision will inevitably cut both ways. |
| 85. | cut or chop down to size, to reduce the stature or importance of: The novelist had a big ego until the critics cut him down to size. |
| 86. | cut it, Informal.
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| 87. | cut it out, Informal. to stop doing something: That hurts! Cut it out! |
| 88. | cut no ice. ice (def. 25). |
| 89. | cut out for, fitted for; capable of: He wasn't cut out for military service. |

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cut (kŭt)
v. cut, cut·ting, cuts
To penetrate with a sharp edge; strike a narrow opening in.
To separate into parts with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument; sever.
To make an incision or a separation.
To have a new tooth grow through the gums.
To form or shape by severing or incising.
To separate from a body; detach.
To lessen the strength of; dilute.
The act of cutting.
The result of cutting, especially an opening or wound made by a sharp edge.