Idioms

cut up

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cut

1. verb To stop doing something. You better cut these antics before your father gets home. Cut the eye-rolling, will you? Would you kids cut the complaining and try to enjoy this hike? Please?
2. verb To make a recording of something, usually musical. Our band is going out to LA to cut a demo. How long does it take to cut an album these days? I can't believe we're going to cut a record with such a famous producer!
3. noun A portion of the profits from something, such as a business venture. I better get a cut of this deal—I came up with the original concept! A: "He gets a cut too?" B: "Did he write any part of the song? Then yes, he gets a cut." Once Sarah heard how much money Mel was making at his new software company, she wanted a cut too.
4. noun A single song on an album or other compilation. Here's a cut from their latest record. How do we get one of our cuts into the hands of a DJ? Listen to the cut we made with that famous producer—it sounds incredible!
5. adjective, slang Circumcised. Guys who aren't cut can be self-conscious.
6. adjective, slang Having well-defined muscles, especially the abdominals. Did you see that lifeguard with his shirt off? He's really cut! Tom used to be a skinny little dude, but he spent the summer getting totally cut! Ugh, there are always these cut dudes who strut around the boardwalk with their shirts off, like they're going to impress someone or something.
7. adjective, slang Drunk. Do you remember last night at the bar at all? You were really cut! Well, I must have been cut if I got up and did karaoke at the bar! Help him get home, will ya? He started drinking whiskey, and now he's totally cut.

cut up

1. verb To chop something into smaller pieces. In this usage, a noun or pronoun can be used between "cut" and "up." You need to cut up these onions so we can brown them. Dad's outside with his chainsaw cutting up the big branch that fell. Can you cut the cheese into cubes for the charcuterie board?
2. verb To judge or criticize someone or something harshly. In this usage, a noun or pronoun can be used between "cut" and "up." I thought I had done a good job on the project, but my boss just cut it up, pointing out every little thing I had overlooked. After I flubbed that easy catch in the outfield, I knew the coach was gonna cut me up back in the dugout. Yikes, Millie's advisers totally cut her thesis up? I hope my advisers aren't as harsh!
3. verb To cause someone to laugh. In this usage, a noun or pronoun can be used between "cut" and "up." His remark cut up the rest of the group, but I just didn't think it was funny. That comedian's stand-up routine really cuts up an audience. Nothing cuts me up faster than my baby's precious laugh.
4. verb To joke or play around. Boys! Stop cutting up and focus on these math problems! Shh! The meeting has started, so stop cutting up! No, with the way those two cut up, they can't sit together, or they'll disrupt the whole class.
5. verb To behave in an angry and perhaps violent manner. In this usage, "up" is typically followed by "rough." Don't leave those guys alone together—they've been known to cut up rough when they disagree with each other. If you're gonna cut up rough with my patrons, I'll have no choice but to toss you out, Burt. Can you separate those two belligerent drunks before they cut up rough?
6. noun One prone to joking or playing around. In this usage, the phrase is usually hyphenated or spelled as a single word. My son is constantly getting in trouble at school because he's such a cut-up. I bet you he's such a cut-up because he's actually insecure. No, those two cutups can't sit together, or they'll disrupt the whole class.
7. adjective Anguished. After the funeral, I was cut up for the rest of the day. Peggy seems awfully cut up. She must have gotten some pretty bad news. I didn't even know she liked that actor, but she is really cut up about his sudden death.
8. adjective, slang Having well-defined abdominal muscles. Did you see that lifeguard with his shirt off? He's totally cut up! Tom used to be a skinny little dude, but he spent the summer getting totally cut up! Ugh, there are always these cut up dudes who strut around the boardwalk with their shirts off, like they're going to impress someone or something.
See also: cut, up
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2024 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.

cut

(oneself) loose (from someone or something) to get out from under the domination of someone or something. At last, she cut herself loose from her mother. She had to cut loose from home. Everyone wished that Todd would cut himself loose from his mother.

cut someone or something up

Fig. to criticize someone or something severely. Jane is such a gossip. She was really cutting Mrs. Jones up. The professor really cut up my essay.
See also: cut, up

cut someone up

Fig. to make someone laugh. That comedian's routine really cut me up. Tommy's rude noises cut the whole class up, but not the teacher.
See also: cut, up

cut up (about someone or something)

Sl. emotionally upset about someone or something. She was all cut up about her divorce. You could see how cut up she was.
See also: cut, up
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

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]
See also: cut, up
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer. Copyright © 2003, 1997 by The Christine Ammer 1992 Trust. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

cut up

v.
1. To slice or chop something into smaller pieces: The electrician cut up the wires. We cut the newspapers up.
2. To wound someone by cutting or gashing, especially in multiple places: The mobster grabbed a knife and cut up the witness.
3. To behave in a playful, comic, or boisterous way; clown: That clown cut us all up. The new teacher cut up the class.
4. Slang To criticize someone or something severely: The teacher cut up the lazy student. The judge cut me up for arriving late.
See also: cut, up
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs. Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

cut

verb
See cut up

cut

1. mod. alcohol intoxicated. He got cut on beer, which is unusual for him.
2. tv. to dilute something. She always cuts her eggnog with cola. Yuck!
3. n. a share of the loot or the profits. (Originally underworld.) You’ll get your cut when everybody else does.
4. n. a single song or section of music on a record. This next cut is one everybody likes.
5. tv. to eliminate something; to stop (doing something). Okay, chum, cut the clowning.
6. mod. muscular; with well-defined muscles, especially in reference to the abdominal muscles. He works out and he’s really cut!
7. mod. circumcised. (Not usually prenominal.) I’m not cut and neither is my brother.

cut (up)

mod. having well-defined abdominal muscles. Andy works hard to try to get a gut that’s cut.
See also: cut, up

cut up

verb
See also: cut, up
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

cut

/give (someone) some slack
Slang To make an allowance for (someone), as in allowing more time to finish something.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
(The Ugly Spirit was revealed to Gysin during experiments with magic and cut-ups.) As with Gysin's other ideas, Burroughs made the Ugly Spirit an important part of his world view and his fiction; he stopped looking within for Freudian sources of neurosis and instead explored ways to identify and struggle against an evil spirit that he thought had poisoned his life.
One of the most revealing findings contradicts the received idea that the majority of Burroughs's revisions for later editions of the trilogy substituted narrative for cut-up material.
There has been some very good critical analysis of Burroughs' work with tapes, and it would have been interesting to reconsider those sonic experiments from the point of view of the early and direct crossover between cut-up methods and Scientology auditing techniques.
and thumb; collage and cut-ups can only mean one thing: what we're
She is as likely to try on such techniques of the avant-garde as cut-ups (e.g., "Found Weather," a cento composed almost entirely of snippets from disparate sources) and surrealism, as the rhetoric of confession ("I have a gift for crying, a talent I'm wired for").
Burroughs continued his unconventional style by using a technique called cut-ups in subsequent books, including The Soft Machine (1961), The Ticket that Exploded (1962), and Nova Express (1964).
When we were coming up, we had to slice the 16mm film together in the darkroom and it was difficult to put cut-ups together.
Product sold by Attwells under the Freedom Food logo include fresh-frozen whole birds, breast joints and cut-ups from white birds reared in pole barns, as well as its premium bronze free range birds.
Products now available from Attwells under the Freedom Food logo include fresh-frozen whole birds, breast joints and cut-ups, together with the company's premium bronze free range birds.
Last spring, when 17-year cicadas swarmed the East Coast, some found their way into the buses, where cut-ups relished the chance to torment their insect-o-phobic peers, reports Tracie Kloc, a bus driver in Sterling, Virginia.
And that chaos is what 99 Cents also delivers to your ears -trashy, post-feminist robotic beats and vocal cut-ups.
Also appended are the following worksheets/reproducibles published in "Fearon Teacher Aids": A-B-C Order; Spelling Cut-Ups; Shop and Spell; Acrostic Spelling; Rainbow Spelling; Word Search; Story Words; Word Scramble; Macaroni Spelling; and Syllable Stacks.
The show, hosted by KMJTX-FM, 105.1, cut-ups "The Outlaw" Tommy Smith and Roger Scott has been a favorite in Little Rock, although ratings have fallen off in the capital city as well.
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