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CUTTING

  • Corfield
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Welsh Marches and West Midlands)

    Corfield

    English (Welsh Marches and West Midlands) : habitational name from a place by the river Corve in Shropshire named Corfield, from the river name (which is from Old English corf ‘cutting’) + Old English feld ‘open country’.

  • Ikkhata
  • Boy/Male

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada

    Ikkhata

    Cutting

  • Cherith
  • Biblical

    Cherith

    cutting; piercing; slaying

  • Blade
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Blade

    English : metonymic occupational name for a cutler, from Middle English blade ‘cutting edge’, ‘sword’.

  • Pochereth
  • Biblical

    Pochereth

    cutting of the mouth of warfare

  • Dulani
  • Boy/Male

    African

    Dulani

    cutting'.

  • Cherith
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Biblical

    Cherith

    Cutting; Piercing; Slaying

  • Tallant
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (of Norman origin)

    Tallant

    English (of Norman origin) : occupational name for a tailor or nickname for a good swordsman, from taillant ‘cutting’, present participle of Old French tailler ‘to cut’ (Late Latin taliare, from talea ‘(plant) cutting’).English : variant spelling of Tallent.Irish : of English origin, recorded in Ireland from the 16th century; also a variant form of Tallon.

  • Biss
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Scottish

    Biss

    English and Scottish : from Middle English bis, biss(e), bice, byse ‘dingy’, ‘dark’, ‘gray’, ‘murky’; ‘dark fur used for trimming and lining garments’ (Old French bis(e), of Germanic origin), hence a nickname for someone with an unhealthy complexion or someone who habitually dressed in particularly drab garments, or (from the noun) a metonymic occupational name for a furrier or maker of fur-trimmed garments.South German : nickname for a cutting, sarcastic person, from Biss ‘bite’.

  • Cutting
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Cutting

    English : patronymic from a short form of the personal name Cudbert (see Cuthbert).Americanized spelling of German Kötting or the variant Kotting (see Koetting).

  • Pochereth
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical

    Pochereth

    Cutting of the mouth of warfare.

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CUTTING

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CUTTING

  • Trevat
  • n.

    A weaver's cutting instrument; for severing the loops of the pile threads of velvet.

  • Screw-cutting
  • a.

    Adapted for forming a screw by cutting; as, a screw-cutting lathe.

  • Vert
  • n.

    The right or privilege of cutting growing wood.

  • Trim
  • v. t.

    To make ready or right by cutting or shortening; to clip or lop; to curtail; as, to trim the hair; to trim a tree.

  • Cutting
  • a.

    Severe; sarcastic; biting; as, a cutting reply.

  • Turning
  • n.

    Turnery, or the shaping of solid substances into various by means of a lathe and cutting tools.

  • Cutting
  • a.

    Adapted to cut; as, a cutting tool.

  • Urethrotome
  • n.

    An instrument for cutting a urethral stricture.

  • Verd
  • n.

    The privilege of cutting green wood within a forest for fuel.

  • Uncut
  • a.

    Not cut; not separated or divided by cutting or otherwise; -- said especially of books, periodicals, and the like, when the leaves have not been separated by trimming in binding.

  • Upset
  • v. t.

    To shorten (a tire) in the process of resetting, originally by cutting it and hammering on the ends.

  • Vampire
  • n.

    Either one of two or more species of South American blood-sucking bats belonging to the genera Desmodus and Diphylla. These bats are destitute of molar teeth, but have strong, sharp cutting incisors with which they make punctured wounds from which they suck the blood of horses, cattle, and other animals, as well as man, chiefly during sleep. They have a caecal appendage to the stomach, in which the blood with which they gorge themselves is stored.

  • Scissure
  • n.

    A longitudinal opening in a body, made by cutting; a cleft; a fissure.

  • Trench
  • v. t.

    To fortify by cutting a ditch, and raising a rampart or breastwork with the earth thrown out of the ditch; to intrench.

  • Trinket
  • v. t.

    A knife; a cutting tool.

  • Cuttingly
  • adv.

    In a cutting manner.

  • Turn
  • v. t.

    To form in a lathe; to shape or fashion (anything) by applying a cutting tool to it while revolving; as, to turn the legs of stools or tables; to turn ivory or metal.

  • Truncation
  • n.

    The act of truncating, lopping, or cutting off.

  • Cutting
  • a.

    Chilling; penetrating; sharp; as, a cutting wind.

  • Trench
  • v. t.

    To cut; to form or shape by cutting; to make by incision, hewing, or the like.