Idioms for cut

Origin of cut

1175–1225; Middle English cutten, kytten, kitten, Old English *cyttan; akin to Old Swedish kotta to cut, Old Norse kuti little knife

synonym study for cut

2. Cut, chop, hack, hew refer to giving a sharp blow or stroke. Cut is a general word for this: to cut the grass. To chop is to cut by giving repeated blows with something sharp, as an ax. To chop and to hew are practically interchangeable, but hew suggests keeping to a definite purpose: to chop or hew down a tree; to hew out a clearing. To hack is to cut or chop roughly and unevenly: to hack off a limb.

OTHER WORDS FROM cut

British Dictionary definitions for cut up (1 of 2)

cut up

verb (tr, adverb)

noun cut-up

informal, mainly US a joker or prankster

British Dictionary definitions for cut up (2 of 2)

cut
/ (kʌt) /

verb cuts, cutting or cut

adjective

noun

Word Origin for cut

C13: probably of Scandinavian origin; compare Norwegian kutte to cut, Icelandic kuti small knife

Medical definitions for cut up

cut
[ kŭt ]

v.

n.

The act of cutting.
The result of cutting, especially an opening or wound made by a sharp edge.

Idioms and Phrases with cut up (1 of 2)

cut up

1

Divide into smaller parts, break the continuity of, as in These meetings have cut up my whole day. [c. 1800]

2

Severely censure or criticize, as in The reviewer cut up the book mercilessly. [Mid-1700s]

3

be cut up. Be distressed or saddened, as in I was terribly cut up when she left. [Mid-1800s] Charles Dickens used this idiom in A Christmas Carol (1844): “Scrooge was not so dreadfully cut up by the sad event.”

4

Behave in a playful, comic, or boisterous way, as in On the last night of camp the children usually cut up. [Late 1800s]

5

cut up rough. Act in a rowdy, angry, or violent way, as in After a beer or two the boys began to cut up rough. [Slang; first half of 1800s]

Idioms and Phrases with cut up (2 of 2)

cut