How To Use Cut off In A Sentence

  • Some spring from immediately below the earth, and may more properly be termed suckers; the others grow on the visible part of the stem or caudex, often close to the oldest leaves; these should be cut off with a sharp knife, in early summer, and if they have a little of the parent bark attached to them all the better. Hardy Perennials and Old Fashioned Flowers Describing the Most Desirable Plants, for Borders, Rockeries, and Shrubberies.
  • Cut off the crust from one of the loaves and slice thinly. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the split second that their gazes locked, that same prickly sensation consumed his mind as if the blood flow to his brain had suddenly been cut off.
  • Don't cut off your nose to spite your face. 
  • Like other sweet pea varieties, give them regular feeds and cut off fading flowers. The Sun
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  • Jem's words are cut off by the buzz of Olivia's telephone, and Olivia presses the speaker button.
  • The site for the Loft, a 77 unit condominium development, is a right-angled triangle with both acute angles cut off so it is more a misshapen pentagon.
  • Therefore go and sacrifice the sheep in the house, cut off the legs and bring them here; thus the carcase will be saved for the choregus. Peace
  • The issue of this was that they did not keep God's covenant, and so the entail was at length cut off, and the sceptre departed from Judah by degrees. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon)
  • There it proceeds to cut off the mosquito’s apyrase supply, so that when the insect drives its proboscis into a new host, it has a harder time keeping the blood flowing. Parasite Rex
  • It was a thin pearl-colored gown that went down to my ankles and cut off somewhere above my heart.
  • The telephone wire is cut off in this house.
  • If this bill is not paid within five days, your gas supply will be cut off.
  • When the molds dried, they were cut off the model and filled with flesh-colored polyester resin reinforced with fiberglass.
  • Basically the blood supply to the bone is cut off or depleted during dislocation and if this occurs for long enough the bone dies.
  • Like always, he cut off the crust before eating it.
  • As the slope steepens, warm, moist air overrunning the cold air is cut off and the precipitation coverage begins to rapidly decrease.
  • Politicians are cut off from the reality of poverty.
  • Another story was that a certain dissipated youth of the community, going home one Saturday night, or rather Sunday morning, from some unhallowed orgy, was pursued by a lamb of fire, with its head cut off and hanging by a strip of skin or flame. The Alpine Path: The Story of My Career
  • Don't forget to cut off the electricity supply before discharging the reefer container.
  • To the same purport is v. 8, for the transgression of my people was he smitten, the stroke was upon him that should have been upon us; and so some read it, He was cut off for the iniquity of my people, unto whom the stroke belonged, or was due. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • They felt cut off from their history and uncertain of their future. Christianity Today
  • I am cut off at the waist for ever.
  • There is always something to be cut off young trees if they are to grow well. 
  • Whether they were taken as a result of his inability to sleep or because of an ongoing addiction to certain drugs is up for debate, but the fact remains — this actor was cut off too early in life and had a lot more to offer. Eric’s Top 10 Untimely Actor Deaths » Scene-Stealers
  • The dried sample is then transferred to a small thistle-headed funnel which has been cut off from its stem, and the opening plugged with a little glass wool, and round the top rim of which a piece of fine platinum wire has been fastened, in order that it may afterwards be easily removed from the Soxhlet tube. Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise
  • This process dragged on for over a year, while at the same time in the city, the gas and heating were cut off.
  • She cut off the best meat and threw away the residue.
  • And behold, Sharrkan and his men charged down upon the Infidels and cut off their retreat and wheeled and tourneyed among the ranks; when lo! The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Ship hulls could be encased in rust that had to be scraped or cut off; potentially valuable copper wires had to be separated from worthless refuse.
  • Mitch looked pretty good with his hair gelled up, and a black button up shirt, and a pair of cut off khaki shorts.
  • Sometimes used for an anabranch, but more often used for one that, in dry season or droughts especially, is cut off at either or both ends from the main stream. Children of the Bush
  • She had black leather gloves on with the fingers cut off and black trousers.
  • And I don't want to cut off the horns of a black snail.
  • The sandwiches were on white bread and every crust was cut off neatly from the edge.
  • Disease, enemy, and debt --these three must be cut off as soon as they begin to grow. 
  • He said he was anti-choice and would cut off funding for poor women's abortions - and he did.
  • We were cut off by the tide.
  • He did not “see his seed, ” nor “prolong his days, ” since he died childless; and we will not permit the word “seed” to be spiritualized on this occasion, for the word “seed” in the Old Testament, means nothing else, than literally “children, ” which it is not pretended he ever had; and how could he “prolong his days, ” when he was cut off in his 33d year. The Grounds of Christianity Examined by Comparing The New Testament with the Old
  • Teams of volunteer electricians rewire homes that have been cut off because families cannot afford the ‘privatized’ rates - which can be five times higher than in the recent past.
  • first you have to cut off the water
  • The army was cut off from its base.
  • How would you like to meet a student on a Monday morning who hasn't eaten since Saturday because his or her welfare was cut off?
  • The Ministry of Finance set the cut off price in the amount of 99. 45% (YTM - 1. 11%) and the weighted average price in the amount of 99. 50% (YTM - 1. 01%). APA
  • Lose not time; be always employed in something useful; cut off all unnecessary actions. 
  • Don't cut off your nose to spite your face. 
  • One hand was soon cut off with a hatchet, and as he still continued to steer the boat down the stream, he was "quieted" by a musket-shot. The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 10
  • Farmers and farmers-hands may regularly cut off the dags to keep their sheep clean.
  • On a map without contours, two communities cut off from one another by an impassable mountain may appear as close neighbours.
  • I also related my first experiment in the arboricultural line, when I cut from two thrifty rows of young cherry-trees any quantity of what I supposed to be ` suckers, 'or ` sprouts,' and was thereafter informed by my gardener that I had cut off all his grafts! '' Life of Hon. Phineas T. Barnum
  • Kanmakan took his sword forthright and cut off his head, saying, The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Volume II
  • Her electricity was cut off when she didn't pay her bill.
  • He was alone in an airless, partially disabled ship, all communication with Earth cut off.
  • At the time, "Church Girl" had slidden far from grace, feeling cut off from every line of support I had ever known. Archive 2007-03-01
  • The invaders cut off their prisoners' arms and legs and threw their mutilated bodies into the ditch.
  • Cut off the conical top and the very tip of each okra pod and then cut the pods, crosswise into 7mm - 1cm segments.
  • The expected disaster – with customers being cut off after two drinks and unknowledgable cooks doing things like flambéing reduction – is somewhat amusing to watch.
  • Her uncle cut off all relations with her parents, who supported her decision to enter the academy.
  • At the heart of AEP's response were a small army of relays - devices designed to trip or cut off power in the event of a sudden surge of electricity or load imbalances.
  • Her brown hair was sharply cut off below her chin and swung freely around matching brown eyes encircled by tanned skin.
  • Disease, enemy, and debt --these three must be cut off as soon as they begin to grow. 
  • Here he was in the back of beyond, a lone American with a Beatles haircut advising a paramilitary team composed of anticommunist, antiroyalist Hmong tribesman who cut off the ears of their dead enemies. Looking Back On the Spy Life
  • While the drum beat slowly, a havildar and two naiks went along the ranks of the prisoners, tearing the buttons off the uniform coats; they had been half cut off before-hand, to make the tearing easy, and soon in front of the long grey line there were little scattered piles of buttons, gleaming dully in the sultry light; the grey coats hung loose, like sacks, each with a dull black face above it. Fiancée
  • Hopefully the leader will not cut off the amendments or foreshorten our ability to offer amendments. CNN Transcript Nov 21, 2009
  • Cut off any unwanted growth and take back older side shoots that protrude too far out.
  • A trial by Annane et al published in JAMA in 2002 used a corticotrophin stimulation test to divide sepsis patient into those who responded with a cortisol increase to some decided upon cut off and those who did not. Corticosteroids in septic shock-the wheel keeps turning
  • Layout is flexible: Door window may install arbitrary, indoor cut off may wantonly lateral axis installation.
  • The electricity supply had been cut off.
  • Mildew in apples and gooseberries usually affects blossom and young shoots - cut off and destroy the affected shoots and blossom.
  • The tape cut off as the limo sped up and accelerated below a triple underpass.
  • Chris Travers: A pollard is a “beheaded” tree (“pollard” meaning “beheaded”), i.e. a tree which was the upper branches and trunk cut off so that it produces a large quantity of upright shoots. The Volokh Conspiracy » To Meld — What Does “Meld” Mean?
  • The motor ideas with which the speech movement has to start are cut off and the subject yields passively to the fate that he cannot intonate his voice. Psychotherapy
  • If you fail to pay your bill, you run the risk of having your electricity supply cut off .
  • He then proceeded to cut off all my dreads until I was left with messy short blondish hair with brown roots.
  • That the people shall be destroyed with the sword: I will cut off the inhabitant from the plain of Aven, the valley of idolatry, for the gods of the Syrians were gods of the valleys (1 Kings xx. 23), were worshipped in valleys; as the idols of Israel were worshipped on the hills; him also that holdeth the sceptre of power, some petty king or other that used to boast of the sceptre he held from Beth-Eden, the house of pleasure. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • Cut off the corners of the square to form a diamond.
  • The northern parts of the county remained for centuries almost completely cut off by fen and water and developed their own unique way of life.
  • I was too cut off from the world to know that the news of my arrest had broken and that the government was slandering me in the press.
  • Many older people feel cut off and isolated.
  • Fallon also said a largely Iraqi-led security presence along the Syrian border crossing has cut off a major transit route for al-Qaida-linked fighters, who are predominantly Sunni.
  • For the LORD loveth judgment, and forsaketh not his saints; they are preserved for ever: but the seed of the wicked shall be cut off. Fret Not
  • MLB is worried that could cut off the pipe line that has produced 51 MLB roster players for this year. 2009 WBC: A tournament to remember
  • superincumbent layers of dead plants cut off the air and arrested decomposition
  • So the Kitchener weighed it out to him and the good-for-naught entered the shop, whereupon the man set the food before him and he ate till he had gobbled up the whole and licked the saucers and sat perplexed, knowing not how he should do with the Cook concerning the price of that he had eaten, and turning his eyes about upon everything in the shop; and as he looked, behold, he caught sight of an earthen pan lying arsy-versy upon its mouth; so he raised it from the ground and found under it a horse's tail, freshly cut off and the blood oozing from it; whereby he knew that the Cook adulterated his meat with horseflesh. Arabian nights. English
  • The very top roof of the main structure rose in a steep slope to be cut off into a flat, even, rectangular-shaped roof.
  • Adams cut off the communication before his expression revealed how much he feared Mendez was right. Bloodthirst
  • None of them will have their leccy cut off. The Sun
  • At this stage, they can be cut off without harming the plant. A Patchwork Garden: Unexpected Pleasures from a Country Garden
  • Remove the tentacles, cut off and discard the hard beak at the base. Times, Sunday Times
  • The electricity supply has been cut off/disconnected at the mains.
  • The inhabitants of Nanagada and Aztlan are descendant from the Caribbean, now occupying lands each side of the Wicked Highs that are cut off from each other except for the Mafolie Pass. Crystal Rain by Tobias Buckell
  • Another method is to cut off the bottom edge of the skirt a quarter of an inch from the turning line; apply the wrong side of the velveteen to the right side of the skirt, baste carefully close to the edge and stitch on the machine through velveteen, cloth, and lining (or facing) just inside the basting which is left in. Textiles and Clothing
  • Lose not time; be always employed in something useful; cut off all unnecessary actions. 
  • Then she, May Allah cut off my father and gar his kingdom cease from him and heal not his heart neither avert from him strangerhood, if he could desire a comelier than thou or aught goodlier than these fair qualities of thine! The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Only when ports cannot be cut off does attacking shipping at sea become necessary.
  • These are patients cut off from their capacity to feel, presumably to protect themselves from emotional pain.
  • ‘We do find dead stingrays with their tails cut off from time to time,’ he added.
  • This he affected by circumscribing a semicircle about an isosceles right-angled triangle and a segment of a circle similar to those cut off by the sides.
  • An earlier upload of this episode accidentally cut off the last few minutes of discussion.
  • He posed the dancers in strange positions and put them off-center or cut off from the frame.
  • When the western frontier's apparent boundlessness was revealed as only ostensible - when lines were measured and laid down across it, disproving its infiniteness - this escape route was cut off.
  • His finger was cut off when he caught it in a machine, but the surgeon was able to sew it back on.
  • I'll share one with you: Needing a piece of wood to fill the gap between a screen door and a spring hasp if you don't know what that is, I can't explain it to you, I dismantled a bookcase, removed the back, stacked the books on the floor, and cut off a teensy-tiny piece of fiberboard, solving that problem. How to Make an Atom Bomb While Your Wife's Away
  • The fragrant flower heads can be trimmed off and saved, but cut off the flower stalk plus two or three pairs of leaves. The Sun
  • She cut and burned herself and tried to cut off her thumb.
  • Whosoever compoundeth any like it, or whosoever putteth any of it upon a stranger, shall even be cut off from his people.
  • On an island like this, I use the term island because it is only accessible by boat and cut off from the main world, time is not a valuable commodity. TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
  • Whatever he might have added was cut off as they had reached the small patio where they'd lunched the previous day.
  • Of course, her sentence was cut off again by a heated passionate kiss.
  • These teachers have been cut off from the mainstream of educational activity.
  • The beard and branches are cut off to leave only the best part of the ginseng, however the head is left on for consumers to better assess the quality of the herb.
  • Readers may not even notice some of the more radical elements like word balloons that get cut off by the panel borders.
  • Since many local shopkeepers think they will scare away customers if hired, they are cut off even from low-level jobs.
  • 5 I will break also the bar of Damascus, and cut off the inhabitant from the plain of Aven, and him that holdeth the sceptre from the house of Eden: and the people of Syria shall go into captivity unto Kir, saith the Lord. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • Out of this, by the common consent, portions might be cut off and booked -- granted by a written document -- to particular men as their own bookland. William the Conqueror
  • Landslides have cut off many villages in remote areas.
  • Presumably this might happen due to the greater amount of material to be eroded before a cut off could occur.
  • The latter appendage, short and "bunchy", ended abruptly, as if either cut off or "driven in" -- adding to the uncouth appearance of the animal. The Boy Slaves
  • The time she cut off her fringe the day before being a bridesmaid. Times, Sunday Times
  • Cut off the corners of the square to form a diamond.
  • The police cut off all their escape routes.
  • Like the gardens and bowers from which it borrows its imagery, it is a place of ‘arrest,’ cut off from the world but paradoxically containing all the world in its ‘essentials,’ purified by the imagination.
  • Max opened his mouth to try to smooth it over, but was cut off by the sudden appearance of five burly men blowing through the door to his right, obviously on their way out.
  • If the projectionist bungles the job, subtitles will run off the bottom of the screen, actors' heads will be cut off, or boom microphones will bob into the frame.
  • Drops of supplies are being made to villages still cut off by the snow.
  • In the latter case, small powdery clusters of hyphae and algae, called soredia are formed and cut off from the thallus as it grows. Lichen
  • The representative defended the disconnections, claiming that the company had simply cut off recalcitrant debtors.
  • A clot in the brain cut off her blood supply.
  • By the time the War of 1812 cut off the shipment of nailrod, the nailery had ceased to be a profitmaking operation.
  • He became abusive; Abelard was a crawling viper (coluber tortuosus) who had come out of his hole (egressus est de caverna sua), and after the manner of a hydra (in similitudinem hydrae), after having one head cut off at Soissons, had thrown out seven more. Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres
  • The entire bolts were cut off at their base when they had produced one open flower.
  • Other tracks distinctly lack progression; a drum loop plods along with murky synth bass lines only to cut off suddenly, or meander without significant development or resolution.
  • My Wednesday column about the ‘nuclear option’ contained the wrong supermajority normally required in the Senate to cut off debate.
  • She was cut off as he got up and hugged her with a kiss on the cheek, close to her lips.
  • As I've explained, the Administration bill would purport to "construe" Common Article 3 of Geneva to prohibit only what the McCain Amendment prohibits (and to cut off any judicial review that might overturn that implausible interpretation of Common Article 3). Balkinization
  • Based on the autobiographical book by Aron Ralston, the film recounts how the canyoneer was forced to cut off his arm after it got pinioned by a boulder. Erica Abeel: WHEN CUTTING OFF YOUR ARM IS THE SOLUTION
  • You is cut off Matty's head; you is got de monish, five tollars, vat I tells you he is vort; now tell me what for you gifs dis five tollars to dis pad poy, a poy so vorse as I do not know. Uncle Rutherford's Nieces A Story for Girls
  • I just borrowed it to refer to the shape of the basins in section -- cones with their apices cut off or a 3-sides-equal trapezium, exactly similar to the ones you see in the diagrams above, though it would be serrated because of the stairs. Tele-Hydrology
  • We weren't in the right place at the right time except on one occasion when a hunt thug got a cut off walking stick with a great knuckle on the end and started going towards some antis.
  • The grisly-minded Rawlins doctor, John Osborne, took over the corpse, cut off the top of the skull, and flayed large sections of skin from the body, skin which he ordered tanned and made into a pair of shoes. Bird Cloud
  • Today she was sorting the spices cabinet in alphabetical order, having run out of labels and tags to cut off things.
  • Cut off from the mass of the people by race and language, the rulers also became increasingly acquisitive in terms of land.
  • A large and deadly mamba snake has been discovered in Sissoko's room and his brother, who has been driving us, has killed it and cut off its head.
  • I had the unenviable task of being escorted by gardaí to cut off the water.
  • This is a landlocked salt-water lake that was cut off when the surrounding reef rose up in prehistoric times.
  • Greece's lenders say the country must abide by the terms of its rescue package in March or be cut off from future payments. Times, Sunday Times
  • You may also see the hope and support of many a flourishing family untimely cut off by the sword of a drunken dueller, in vindication of something that he miscalls his honour. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. IV.
  • Adam climbed over the bed to his suitcase pulled out a pair of his briefs and cut off shorts.
  • And in the spring they make of them excellent Minnow-tansies; for being washed well in salt, and their heads and tails cut off, and their guts taken out, and not washed after, they prove excellent for that use; that is, being fried with yolk of eggs, the flowers of cowslips and of primroses, and a little tansy; thus used they make a dainty dish of meat. The Compleat Angler : or, The Contemplative Man`s Recreation
  • But by criminalising the taking of any bird's egg, our legislators inadvertently cut off one route in which many of today's older naturalists learned their trade, the schoolboy pastime of "egging". Enjoying the natural world
  • Sherkan and his men fell upon the infidels and cut off their retreat and tourneyed among the ranks, when lo, a cavalier of goodly presence opened a passage through the army of the Greeks and circled hither and thither amongst them, cutting and thrusting and covering the ground with heads and bodies, so that the infidels feared him and their necks bent under his blows. The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Volume II
  • This first pic shows a technical based on a Toyota Land Cruiser High Top wagon with the roof cut off.
  • She phoned the York TV hotline, was given another number, phoned that, got cut off twice and eventually had to call in the village's television expert to retune the equipment, for which she paid £15.
  • When the lilies have finished flowering, I cut off dead flowers and let the foliage die down naturally. Times, Sunday Times
  • When an animal is “dehorned,” the horn has to be cut off at the base to remove the generative tissue—that produces a hole in the skill exposing the brain. Archive 2010-06-01
  • One Indian story told of a hero who so loved his paramour that when she had to pick him out from a hall of indistinguishable heroes, lookalikes in gold armour, he cut off his little finger so she would know and choose him.
  • Lose not time; be always employed in something useful; cut off all unnecessary actions. 
  • Nanking decade [ 1927 - 37 ] as period of internationalization, cut off by Japanese invasion.
  • He was cut off in mid-sentence by a loud and piercing scream from the rear of the wagon.
  • King and the Sage answered, “Things beyond compt; and the least of secrets is that if, directly after thou hast cut off my head, thou open three leaves and read three lines of the page to thy left hand, my head shall speak and answer every question thou deignest ask of it.” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Montana Kid, however, was fresh from Salt Water, and they annexed him while they pitched camp, swamping him with questions concerning the outside, from which they had been cut off for a twelvemonth. AT THE RAINBOW'S END
  • However, I can manage to cut off one of these pernicious tentacles of ignorance by referring to dear Strabo who had long ago alluded to a connection between the name Samos and words for 'high' Strab., Geo. How many fingers do you see?
  • The four had tried to swim to safety after being cut off by the rising tide but had regained the safety of the sandbank when the hovercraft arrived to lift them to safety on the shore at Red Bank.
  • But many more in the city of nine million people hunker down, lining up for rationed water and storing it in pails and tubs as the city's water supply was cut off.
  • Brett leaned over to place a quick kiss on her lips as he cut off another driver to the right of his original lane.
  • WHITBECK: Well, they say they already have crews out on those roads and as they come upon parts of the roads that are blocked, they're going ahead and reopening them and that's why La Paz, which is the largest city in the region has about 150,000 people, has not been cut off. CNN Transcript Sep 2, 2006
  • A white fence cut off its backyard, which contained a neat garden, several trees, blossoming with pink flowers in the spring, and an old wooden swing set.
  • The tea garden is very isolated, cut off from the main roads by rutted dust tracks.
  • His finger was cut off when he caught it in a machine, but the surgeon was able to sew it back on.
  • Our water supply has been cut off again.
  • From a sheath mounted next to the foremast he pulled a long sword and, laying the smoke down on an air vent, with one thwack cut off the end.
  • When the customer is operating in enemy territory or the enemy has cut off all ground lines of communication to the customer, watercraft and trucks cannot make the deliveries.
  • There is always something to be cut off young trees if they are to grow well. 
  • Gerald finally acknowledged that he was no longer a teenager and realized that he needed to cut off his beloved rattail in order to display a more professional appearance.
  • We'd better lay in plenty of food in case we're cut off when it snows.
  • Among recent, well-publicized cases is that of a United Airlines passenger from Connecticut who, swacked out of his mind and cut off from the airline's hooch, defecated on a food cart.
  • Some would chop down the trees; some would measure and cut off the logs; some would "scutch" the logs; and others would come along with a broadaxe, and hew two sides of the logs flat. Last of the Pioneers, Or Old Times in East Tenn.; Being the Life and Reminiscences of Pharaoh Jackson Chesney (Aged 120 Years).
  • There is mentioned the case of a young woman who cut off her right hand and cast it into the fire, and attempted to enucleate her eyes, and also to hold her remaining hand in the fire. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
  • There is always something to be cut off young trees if they are to grow well. 
  • Crews worked on a firebreak in a nearby canyon to try to cut off an eastward route for the fire.
  • There was no other spot admitting of debarcation on the home side; if we got out on the other, and made for the bridge, we should certainly be seen and cut off. The Golden Age
  • Lose not time; be always employed in something useful; cut off all unnecessary actions. 
  • With an issue of blood she was cut off from the worship of God in the formal sense.
  • The top of the tree had been cut off to encourage it to branch lower down.
  • Spring flowering trees such as flowering cherries, plums and apricots should not be pruned during winter, otherwise you will cut off many of the flowers.
  • Many supporters from leading Frankish families followed him to Italy and were for a long time cut off from their properties and benefices in the countries of origin (which were often even confiscated).
  • Company A beat off several banzai attacks but was bypassed and in danger of being cut off and surrounded.
  • Somewhat contradictorily, the House then voted down a second resolution that would have cut off funds for certain types of operations against the Libyan regime. Dr. Charles G. Cogan: Comfort for Gaddafi, Pain for Obama: Is This the Formula We Want?
  • I’m in the process of reading, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich and its pretty clear that Germany did have the kernel of a very strong case for a communication link between the contiguous main part of Germany and the province of East Prussia that was cut off from Germany by the Polish Corridor around Gdansk or Danzig. Russia: Nazis Just Wanted To Build A Railway Through Poland « Unambiguously Ambidextrous
  • Then cut off the dry white part at the bottom. Times, Sunday Times
  • The aim was to cut off the enemy's escape route/supplies.
  • There are minor mutinies ( "What are they going to do, cut off our hair and send us to Vietnam?"), an undercurrent of racial tension fed by the black-power politics of H. Rap Brown and Huey Newton, and resentments that provoke plots to "frag" (i.e., kill) their superiors. The Book on Vietnam
  • This proves again that the anæsthesia is not retinal, but it proves very much more; namely, that _the retinal stimulation is transmitted to those lower centers which mediate reflex movements, at the very instant during which it is cut off from the higher, conscious centers_. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory.
  • The danger here is that this ballooning could cut off the emergency cooling water altogether.
  • Mah-mee cut off all our hair, smudged us with charcoal, bound our chests, dressed us like peasant boys.
  • One of the worst hit villages, Naburn, was temporarily cut off by the rising waters.
  • They have joined a campaign calling on investment banks to cut off funding for environmentally devastating dam projects.
  • Almaty has been cut off the electricity: dark streets, traffic lights not working, rain, accidents … The whole downtown was in blackout, most micro-districts also. Global Voices in English » Kazakhstan: Blackout in Almaty
  • The blowout preventer, designed to cut off leaks with a series of valves and pipe shears, is still partially open. BP pursues short-term ways to stop leak
  • So himz cut off dat part of his cloke so as not to disturb teh kitteh. Da bugs dey is huge, da duckies dey glows - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?

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