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Definition of Cut out
1. Adjective. Having been cut out. "The cut-out pieces of the dress"
2. Verb. Delete or remove. "Cut out the newspaper article"
Specialized synonyms: Excise
Derivative terms: Cutout
3. Verb. Form and create by cutting out. "Picasso cut out a guitar from a piece of paper"
Entails: Cut
Generic synonyms: Forge, Form, Mold, Mould, Shape, Work
Derivative terms: Cutout
4. Verb. Cut off and stop. "The bicyclist was cut out by the van"
5. Verb. Strike or cancel by or as if by rubbing or crossing out. "Scratch out my name on that list"
6. Verb. Intercept (a player).
Category relationships: Baseball, Baseball Game
Generic synonyms: Arrest, Check, Contain, Hold Back, Stop, Turn Back
7. Verb. Cease operating. "The pump suddenly cut out"
Definition of Cut out
1. Adjective. (idiomatic) Well suited; appropriate; fit for a particular activity or purpose. ¹
2. Verb. (&lit cut out) ¹
3. Verb. (transitive) To refrain from (doing something, using something etc.), to stop/cease (doing something). ¹
4. Verb. (transitive) To remove, omit. ¹
5. Verb. (transitive) To oust, to replace. ¹
6. Verb. (transitive) To separate from a herd. ¹
7. Verb. (intransitive) To stop working, to switch off; (of a person on the telephone etc.) to be inaudible, be disconnected. ¹
8. Verb. (intransitive) To leave suddenly. ¹
9. Verb. (context: usually in passive) To arrange. ¹
10. Verb. (transitive) To intercept ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cut Out
Literary usage of Cut out
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A General Collection of the Best and Most Interesting Voyages and Travels in by John Pinkerton (1814)
"The pillars in this court are forty feet high. The work of the capitals is not
in relief, but only cut out in lines. He next mentions a place like ..."
2. Dyke's Automobile and Gasoline Engine Encyclopedia by Andrew Lee Dyke (1920)
"IVr mit belt to slip when first starting and gain speed gradually. The cut-out
should cut in, or close at about i'T.0 to 67") rp in. ..."
3. Homerica, Emendations and Elucidations of the Odyssey by Thomas Leyden Agar (1908)
"... something very unsatisfactory in the way An is here dealt with, either by (i)
absolute removal, or (2) substitution of in, which then has to be cut out ..."
4. Annual Report by Illinois Farmers' Institute (1902)
"The doors are only the wall of the silo cut out on bevel, and the pieces thus
cut out nailed together with some barrel staves, the staves giving the short ..."