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Cut in   /kət ɪn/   Listen
Cut in

verb
1.
Allow someone to have a share or profit.
2.
Drive in front of another vehicle leaving too little space for that vehicle to maneuver comfortably.
3.
Break into a conversation.  Synonyms: barge in, break in, butt in, chime in, chisel in, put in.
4.
Interrupt a dancing couple in order to take one of them as one's own partner.
5.
Mix in with cutting motions.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Cut in" Quotes from Famous Books



... every day hundreds and sometimes possibly thousands of people must climb up one side and down the other in getting from one part of the town to another. Therefore, when Chang {129} Chih-tung was Viceroy in Hankow he decided that he would make a cut in this hill and save the people all this trouble. And he did. Very shortly thereafter, however, he sickened of a painful abscess in his ear, and the Chinese doctors whom he consulted were quick in pointing out the trouble. By making the ...
— Where Half The World Is Waking Up • Clarence Poe

... the name still given to the limestone slabs cut in the Torah quarries South of Cairo. The word is classical, we find in Ibn Khaldun (vol. i. p. 21, Fr. Trans.) a chief surnomme el-Balt (le pave), a cause de sa fermete et de sa force ...
— Supplemental Nights, Volume 5 • Richard F. Burton

... think we didn't try? I cut in toward it. It turned in the same direction. I pulled up about three hundred feet, and it did the same. Finally, I opened my throttles and cut in fast, intending to pull tip if we got too close. I needn't have worried. The thing let out a burst ...
— The Flying Saucers are Real • Donald Keyhoe

... which is, one hundred and six miles from Macon, and two hundred and fifty from the Gulf of Mexico. Andersonville is about sixty miles from Macon, and, consequently, about three hundred miles from the Gulf. The camp was merely a hole cut in the wilderness. It was as remote a point from, our armies, as they then lay, as the Southern Confederacy could give. The nearest was Sherman, at Chattanooga, four hundred miles away, and on the other side of a range of mountains hundreds ...
— Andersonville, complete • John McElroy

... home for the benefit of the field forces? Both had in South Africa two enemies in common that could not be subdued—distance and difficulty of communication. With but a single line of railway, which half the time was cut in one place or another, it was but natural that the Concentration Camps were deprived of a good many things which those who were compelled to live within their limits would, under different circumstances or conditions, have had as a matter ...
— Cecil Rhodes - Man and Empire-Maker • Princess Catherine Radziwill


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