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Meaning of cutting | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B1 Frequent
ˈkʌtɪŋ

Definitions

  1. The action of the verb to cut.
    countable, uncountable
  2. A surname.
  3. A section removed from a larger whole.
    countable
  4. A newspaper clipping.
    countable
  5. A leaf, stem, branch, or root removed from a plant and cultivated to grow a new plant.
    countable
  6. An abridged selection of written work, often intended for performance.
    countable
  7. An open passage at a level lower than the surrounding terrain, dug for a canal, railway, or road to go through.
    UK, countable
  8. The editing of film or other recordings.
    uncountable
  9. The process of bringing metals to a desired shape by chipping away the unwanted material.
    uncountable
  10. The act of cutting one's own skin as a symptom of a mental disorder; self-harm.
    uncountable

Equivalents

العربية القطع انقطاع قد قرض قطعة
Български монтаж режещ сечене
Čeština odřezek řízek seč zářez zásek
Esperanto acerba
हिन्दी कटाई छेदन
Magyar dugvány
Bahasa Indonesia potongan serpihan
日本語 切り取り
한국어 칼질
Latina virgulta
Nederlands knipsel stek
Português cortante corte estaca recorte
Română decupare tăiere
Kiswahili ukataji
Українська живець

Examples

“How many different cuttings can this movie undergo?”
“Ye ſhall not make any cuttings in your fleſh for the dead, nor print any markes vpon you: I am the Lord.”
“The first stage of the demolition work consisted of removing, by oxy-acetylene cutting, the whole of the plate floor, cross-girders, and lattice parapets.”
“The first industrial use of CO₂ lasers was the cutting of plywood dye boards for the packaging industry. [...] The laser cutting process has a number of advantages over competing technologies which have ensured the growth of this branch of industry: [...]”
“Female genital cutting is an intentional, nonmedical modification of the female genitalia. It is commonly performed on girls between the ages of 4 and 16, although in some cases it is performed on infants as young as three months old.”
“[O]bſerving [...] abundance of Matter floating in the Urine like Bran, with a great Number of Recrements like Cuttings of Hair, ſome above an Inch long, which Subſtances were found in all the Water that I made in above Twelve Months; for which I could get no Remedy: I was adviſed to drink Water, which in about half a Year did intirely free me from thoſe Symptoms, [...]”
“I make such gelatine as above mentioned of two different qualities, [...] and I use all such hides and skins, and cuttings of hides and skins as are usually employed in manufacturing glue according to the ordinary method, and which are commonly called glue-pieces, [...]”
“Yet, while paper cuttings can look very modern, paper cutting as an activity has a long, rich heritage. The Chinese, who first invented paper as we know it, started cutting more than a thousand years before most Europeans had ever seen a piece of paper. The oldest extant paper cutting is a simple symmetrical circle from the sixth century that was found in a far western province of China.”
“Extract from "Newspaper Cuttings relating to Sussex," (Sussex Archaeological Collections, 1872, pp. 140, 141.)”
“The Witness. [After a farther inspection of the newspaper cutting.] No; it is not in that part about Weber, but here [indicating another newspaper cutting] is the agreement that Mr. Wilder was testifying about, and that has Weber's name.”
“Mrs. Seal wandered about with newspaper cuttings, which seemed to her either "quite splendid" or "really too bad for words." She used to paste these into books, or send them to her friends, having first drawn a broad bar in blue pencil down the margin, a proceeding which signified equally and indistinguishably the depths of her reprobation or the heights of her approval.”
“H.P. Lovecraft, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward Moved by some vague presentiment amidst the horrors of that period, Willett arranged with an international press-cutting bureau for accounts of notable current crimes and accidents in Prague and in eastern Transylvania; and after six months believed that he had found two very significant things amongst the multifarious items he received and had translated.”
“To propagate by cuttings, is to cut off the branch or ſtem of a Plant, and to ſet it in the Earth without Roots. Strip it of leaves and branches, Plant deeper than theſe with Roots, and in a rich and moiſt ſoil, keeping it watered and ſhaded, Untill Rooted; cut off their Tops ſave Greens, as if your cutting be 12 Inches long, let 9 be under, and 3 above ground.”
“All the Sorts of Vines are propagated either from Layers or Cuttings, the former of which is greatly practis'd in England, but the latter is what I would recommend, as being much preferable to the other. [...] I had rather plant a good Cutting than a rooted Plant, provided it be well choſen, and there is leſs Danger of its not growing.”
“The method of propagating the Box is perfectly easy: it may be raised from cuttings, or from seed, or by layering. [...] For planting the cuttings, [Thomas] Hanbury says the month of August is the best time, if any rain falls.”
“Allison carried it all home, and then spent a long time that evening out on the back porch, wrapping up Ida's collection of rooted cuttings, each snuff tin and plastic cup in its own carefully fashioned sleeve of wet newspaper.”
“The actor had to make his cutting shorter to fit the audition time.”
“[T]he railway, however, will require a farther outlay to render it complete, though the locomotive engine has passed over every foot of ground from Liverpool to Salford. The slopes of the cuttings want dressing, and several of them want protecting with foot walls.”
“We flash across the level. / We thunder thro' the bridges. / We bicker down the cuttings. / We sway along the ridges.”
“No borrow pit excavation was necessary, and 41,000 cu. yd. were removed from cuttings by excavating machines.”
“On the descent the line is often in cuttings; some are high, such as at Scarcroft, where a cut through firestone and fireclay was necessary, and near Bardsey, where the line threads a deep tree-lined gorge.”
“Boring, drilling, milling, and turning are all different kinds of metal cutting processes.”
“Metal-cutting tools often have two cutting edges, both of which are angled to the direction of cutting, and in round-nosed tools the inclination continuously varies [...].”
“Cutting has become one of the most popular forms of self-injury, but there are others at well, and each is just as dangerous as cutting. The information here might help you recognize the signs of self-injury in others.”

CEFR level

B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
See all B1 English words →

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