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How To Use Cut up In A Sentence

  • Their dried dung is found everywhere, and is in many places the only fuel afforded by the plains; their skulls, which last longer than any other part of the animal, are among the most familiar of objects to the plainsman; their bones are in many districts so plentiful that it has become a regular industry, followed by hundreds of men (christened "bone hunters" by the frontiersmen), to go out with wagons and collect them in great numbers for the sake of the phosphates they yield; and Bad Lands, plateaus, and prairies alike, are cut up in all directions by the deep ruts which were formerly buffalo trails. VIII. The Lordly Buffalo
  • However, the duck confit was cut up in cold bits and enmeshed in a strange, oily construction of mushrooms and haricots verts.
  • Even Ethiopia, situated on a high plateau, which was cut up by mountains and vast canyons that made internal travel difficult, was accessible only from an exceptionally hot and unpleasant desert coast.
  • Cut skin and fat from the hams, pull meat off the bone and cut up or shred into pieces. Times, Sunday Times
  • I got/was cut up several times on the motorway this morning - I've never seen such dangerous driving!
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  • He was mid thirties, with thinning, reddish blond hair which had been razor cut up the back. THE COMPANY OF STRANGERS
  • Cut up some pieces of plywood ahead of time to use as holding forms, and clamp every thing down.
  • Dislocation also occurred when Buddhist sutras and commentaries were cut up, dispersed, and sometimes reformatted in calligraphy model books (tekagami).
  • When Arthur Young wished to ascertain the relative proportions of cultivated and uncultivated land in France, he cut up a map of the country, and weighed them one against the other; but the platometer would have helped him to a more satisfactory conclusion. Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 434 Volume 17, New Series, April 24, 1852
  • a sufficient amount of rope the last bearskin was cut up into strips, as it was necessary to have nearly a hundred feet, and the bearskin was a much-needed addition to the small quantity of ramie cord which they had on hand. The Wonder Island Boys: Exploring the Island
  • My blonde tresses had caused me trouble ever since I had my haircut up to my shoulders, from a previous length of my waist, and the natural curl came out.
  • The boline is the practical knife - if you need to trim a too-long candle wick, cut up some herbs, etc. while in ritual, the boline is the tool you reach for, not your athame. Witchvox - RSS Feed - New Articles This Week
  • She cut up the carrots and put them in the pot.
  • He was mid thirties, with thinning, reddish blond hair which had been razor cut up the back. THE COMPANY OF STRANGERS
  • Remove chicken from water; remove skin, debone and cut up chicken into medium-sized pieces.
  • If we cut up beasts simply because they cannot prevent us and because we are backing our own side in the struggle for existence, it is only logical to cut up imbeciles, criminals, enemies, or capitalists for the same reasons. C.S. Lewis 
  • For added zing, cut up your extra escarole for a side salad with tomatoes, garbanzos, and Italian dressing.
  • He cut up the meat on his plate.
  • his opponent cut upward toward his chin
  • I got/was cut up several times on the motorway this morning - I've never seen such dangerous driving!
  • I got/was cut up several times on the motorway this morning - I've never seen such dangerous driving!
  • If you see him very savagely cut up in "The Revolver," you will recognize the kindly hands which held the bistoury, scalpel, and tenaculum, and the gentleman who wept while he wounded. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 21, July, 1859
  • Let us cut up bushes and briers, pile them before the door and set fire to them, and smoke that auld devil's dam as if she were to be reested for bacon. '' The Black Dwarf
  • But the food safety authority acknowledges this mark may be erased if the meat has been cut up.
  • Careful how you approach him - he can cut up a bit rough if he's got a mind to.
  • When the tatties had boiled enough she drained them and abandoned the meal to cut up lean bits of chicken for the dog. LOOKING FOR THE SPARK
  • Oncoming bikers seemed intent on taking the short cut up and over the Aussie's Nissan.
  • Having said that the template of beats, cut up vocals and dreamy melodies remains the same.
  • Lafayette street was added years later after the land had been cut up and sold to developers.
  • There was reportedly one designer who would rather cut up their dresses than see her in them. Times, Sunday Times
  • There were also chips of all kinds, vegetables, pickles, cut up fruit, and fresh homemade bread.
  • He was wearing different clothing now, ripped denim shorts and a cut up shirt exposing his stomach, and his hair was down now and flowed past his shoulder blades.
  • If you can't control your credit card spending, cut up your card and start paying cash.
  • All of that I had done myself, and I still had to put approximately 200 savories into the oven to be heated, and cut up some cheese with crackers.
  • Article wish you to have a good trip...To railroad train late point two hour the passenger who mean cut up rough , please toward that sow protest of kitchen inside.
  • Competition was keen as the youngsters negotiated the testing courses that easily cut up following heavy overnight rain and made for slippy underfoot conditions.
  • Hollywood was strangely unsentimental about its own history: costumes that would now be considered sacrosanct were frequently cut up and used to mop floors. Times, Sunday Times
  • Like their cousins, they are hermaphroditic, but unlike them, they do not regenerate if cut up; they are more specialized, having suckers at their tail ends.
  • Firstly, either cut up the credit cards or parcel them up and put them away.
  • Coarse-textured stuffing is essential to what I regard as one of the glories of Christmas. onions 2 butter a thick slice thyme a large sprig or two rosemary 1 large sprig sausage meat 400g fresh breadcrumbs 3 handfuls cooked peeled chestnuts (boiled or roasted) 50g, roughly chopped Madeira or dry marsala a wine glass Peel and cut up the onions just short of finely chopped. Tender delights
  • If we cut up beasts simply because they cannot prevent us and because we are backing our own side in the struggle for existence, it is only logical to cut up imbeciles, criminals, enemies, or capitalists for the same reasons. C.S. Lewis 
  • Cut"; at which the musick sounding again, the carver humour'd it, and cut up the meat with such antick postures, you'd have thought him a carman fighting to an organ. The Satyricon of Petronius Arbiter
  • If we cut up beasts simply because they cannot prevent us and because we are backing our own side in the struggle for existence, it is only logical to cut up imbeciles, criminals, enemies, or capitalists for the same reasons. C.S. Lewis 
  • And it was cut up so badly that even my aunt, absent-minded as she sometimes is, couldn't have put it in the washer or hung it on the line without noticing that it was damaged.
  • Cut up crisp vegetable sticks with dipping sauce - ranch, peanut, sweet chili or tomato.
  • Prometheus was forward to cut up a great ox and set portions before them, trying to befool the mind of Zeus. Hesiod, Homeric Hymns, and Homerica
  • He was badly cut up in the fight.
  • Palm Beach to cut up shindies, or watch others do it. The Firing Line
  • ‘We want to go home; please help us so that we are not cut up into pieces because then you would bear the guilt of orphaning our children,’ said one of the hostages, speaking in an Egyptian accent.
  • Once they conceive a quilt, the fabrics are chosen, cut up and combined using organic cotton wadding.
  • Jean was really cut up when her husband left her.
  • They are then cut up by the women embroiderers, placed together as three separate widths with different pattern and color front and back, then sewn together again using twisted yellow silk thread.
  • Cut up four kiwi fruit into chunks, removing pith. The Sun
  • If old, these should be cut up and baked in a tin with chickens.
  • On the fat-burning side of the equation, the foods and combos of foods you eat before and after you hit a cardio session can maximize your ability to cut up and retain hard-earned muscle mass.
  • They should cut up his membership card. Times, Sunday Times
  • She ran still, heedless of the pain the thorns and rough branches caused her, heedless of the sharp stones in the ground which cut up her feet, heedless of all the things around her.
  • I'm getting all cringey thinking the sound sugar would make if it was getting cut up. Steel-Cut Sugar And Sugar Scissors
  • The piece of cloth will cut up into three suits.
  • The 38-year-old brought up a dogged ton with a fortunate under-edge for a single before Sammy accounted for Mishra, who cut uppishly to Bravo. Rahul Dravid century gives India fighting chance against West Indies
  • ~ -- In the case of ballistite the treatment is the same, except that when it is in a very finely granulated condition it need not be cut up. Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise
  • They naively believe that their words do not influence others, but I have read the following sentence on an online diary: ‘I think I might cut up my gums so it hurts to eat so I won't want to; I saw that on a pro-ana site.’
  • Liptikl is a 'cut up' word arranger, and it can give you extra advantage when it comes to writing. Softpedia - Windows - All
  • In the intervals of pandemonium, each chattered, cut up, hooted, screeched, and danced, himself sufficient unto himself, filled with his own ideas and volitions to the exclusion of all others, a veritable centre of the universe, divorced for the time being from any unanimity with the other universe-centres leaping and yelling around him. CHAPTER XIV
  • A few deadfall aspens were cut up and burned.
  • Fresh greens were cut up into very tiny piece and coated with a layer of flour, which was made into the shape of a petal.
  • Despite windy weather Miss Skelton and the two Oshkosh air aces, Steve Wittman and Bill Brennard, cut up the atmosphere in what could have been taken for good old "barnstorming" tactics were it not for the fact that the emphasis throughout the program was on safe flying. The Green Bay Press-Gazette Latest Headlines
  • Davies gets on strike and hits a drive cum cut uppishly through point with his bat halfway between 90 and 180 degrees. England v Pakistan – as it happened!
  • First, two rows of adjustable knives in front of the compactor cut up old snow, reconditioning the snow surface.
  • I got/was cut up several times on the motorway this morning - I've never seen such dangerous driving!
  • There are also several vehicles cut up by acetylene equipment and dumped in a pond.
  • A jigsaw puzzle is a picture which has been cut up into bits, and you must make the picture again.
  • There were acres upon acres of greensward set about and cut up with gravelled walks, great alleyed rows of trees, groves without number and galleries and colonnades innumerable. Royal Palaces and Parks of France
  • She cut up the carrots and put them in the pot.
  • Already, there were tales last week of German beef being cut up in Ireland and repackaged for the supermarket shelves of this sceptred isle.
  • The beets are cut up mechanically into slices in machines resembling giant food processors.
  • That was a water well driller I cut up with a plasma cutter. Trailer import.
  • The film was severely cut up by many reviewers.
  • Upon this, Annette would vehemently maintain that fed they were, and amply, as she had seen Elliott cut up their meat; whilst the friendly newsmonger would charitably hint, that her intended knew as well as most men how to turn an _honest_ penny, by cheating the dogs of their food, and selling it elsewhere. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 20, No. 560, August 4, 1832
  • The team has cut up cars and had engineers work on aerodynamics, but nothing has helped.
  • Hollywood was strangely unsentimental about its own history: costumes that would now be considered sacrosanct were frequently cut up and used to mop floors. Times, Sunday Times
  • And it was cut up so badly that even my aunt, absent-minded as she sometimes is, couldn't have put it in the washer or hung it on the line without noticing that it was damaged.
  • Let your child cut up headlines from old magazines and newspapers and stick the same letters on pages of a scrapbook.
  • According to market researcher Datamonitor, 3 million people cut up their credit cards in 1991 when standing charges were introduced.
  • He has cut up the credit card and closed his bank accounts.
  • The beets are cut up mechanically into slices in machines resembling giant food processors.
  • When the whale is cut up, the head resembles that of the mysterious Sphynx.
  • It is probable, too, that you will become so habituated at last to the sight of inscriptions cut upon rock surfaces, especially if you travel much through the country, that you will often find yourself involuntarily looking for texts or other chisellings where there are none, and could not possibly be, as if ideographs belonged by natural law to rock formation. Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan Second Series
  • She cut up copper sheets, inked them and printed from them onto found papers.
  • A stable core helps you ‘set your teeth and drag it out ‘when you are trying to arc turns through the cut up crud or your ski gets caught in a rut.’
  • One of the Ashmolean's pictures, a study in silverpoint for The Golden stairs, is displayed beside a letter revealing that it was drawn not with an elegant little pencil, but with a sixpence the artist cut up for the purpose.
  • Figure 3 the coelom is much cut up by the gill slits, and we have remaining of it (a) the dorsal coelomic canals (d.c.c.) and (b) the branchial canals (br. c.) in the bars between the slits. Text Book of Biology, Part 1: Vertebrata
  • This piece of material may be cut up to make a pair of trousers.
  • A third perceived he had a windgall, and would bid no money; a fourth knew by his eye that he had the botts; a fifth wondered what a plague I could do at the fair with a blind, spavined, galled hack, that was only fit to be cut up for a dog-kennel. The Vicar of Wakefield
  • She opened the sewing kit and took out a pair of shears, and made a cut up the very front to the neck so that the shirt came off the right side of him.
  • I got/was cut up several times on the motorway this morning - I've never seen such dangerous driving!
  • This piece of material may be cut up to make a pair of trousers.
  • The different bundles are then carried back to the factory, where they are placed in a machine, not unlike a chaff-cutter, and cut up into small pieces. Little Folks (July 1884) A Magazine for the Young
  • The boa was cut up and its meat, a local delicacy apparently, distributed to those present for consumption.
  • Democrats in Iowa, New Hampshire and numerous elsewheres disagreed, but Ms. Hope was a bitter-ender, urging Mr. Dean to drop plans to make Wisconsin his last stand and crash his Zero into the New York primary-forget about John Kerry getting cut up. A Woman Called Hope Installs Mrs. Clinton At Democratic Podium
  • She cut up the carrots and put them in the pot.
  • He drew forth a creese, and holding it up saw this name cut upon the handle: "JOHN POTTS. Cord and Creese
  • Camo suggested that we should try and catch a cowfish, the flesh of which, when cut up into strips and dried in the sun, could be preserved for a considerable time, and would prove more serviceable than any other food we were likely to obtain. The Wanderers Adventures in the Wilds of Trinidad and Orinoco
  • Their dried dung is found everywhere, and is in many places the only fuel afforded by the plains; their skulls, which last longer than any other part of the animal, are among the most familiar of objects to the plainsman; their bones are in many districts so plentiful that it has become a regular industry, followed by hundreds of men (christened "bone hunters" by the frontiersmen), to go out with wagons and collect them in great numbers for the sake of the phosphates they yield; and Bad Lands, plateaus, and prairies alike, are cut up in all directions by the deep ruts which were formerly buffalo trails. VIII. The Lordly Buffalo
  • In the same manner I treated the acicular leaves, and portions of the stem separately, both being previously cut up into small pieces, and from both I obtained phenol. Scientific American Supplement, No. 443, June 28, 1884
  • He cut up and smoke-dried the flesh, and the intolerable pangs of hunger compelled me to share the loathsome food with him. Green Mansions
  • He cut up the vegetables; sliced and washed the chicken and mixed together the sauce with soy sauce and mirin.
  • I've seen too many of ` em cut up an 'gouged an' chawed not to know. ' Chapter 3: Jackson's Arm
  • There was a time when the two sexes were only one, but now God has halved them, — much as the Lacedaemonians have cut up the Arcadians, — and if they do not behave themselves he will divide them again, and they will hop about with half a nose and face in basso relievo. The Symposium
  • There were mangoes, apples, oranges, pears, watermelons, melons, kiwis and some other strange fruits that I hadn't seen before nicely cut up and neatly arranged in matching bowls and plates.
  • We had another meeting up at Fritz's this morning, this time with the excavator who's going to do the grading and gravelling of the road we cut up to the house site. Archive 2007-01-01
  • There was also a small chorus and a number of non-speaking parts, including the butcher who cut up the model hippo and priests who censed the space with myrrh before the performance and moved props.
  • Then cut up your old cards to avoid the temptation of spending more. Times, Sunday Times
  • They should cut up his membership card. Times, Sunday Times
  • The heavy truck cut up the new lawn.
  • They're sort of pernicketty cattle to manage; I'd sooner take to horses; and if one happens to die, you don't feel so cut up like as if it was a wife. Medoline Selwyn's Work
  • It was nicely cut up by the time we'd finished! The Sun
  • Let us cut up bushes and briers, pile them before the door and set fire to them, and smoke that auld devil’s dam as if she were to be reested for bacon.” The Black Dwarf
  • That piece of cloth will cut up into a jacket.
  • If we cut up beasts simply because they cannot prevent us and because we are backing our own side in the struggle for existence, it is only logical to cut up imbeciles, criminals, enemies, or capitalists for the same reasons. C.S. Lewis 
  • There are also clear signs that much of the mammoth bone had been cut up with flint tools. BRITAIN BC: Life In Britain and Ireland before the Romans
  • The weapons were cut up and remade into 4,000 hoes, sickles, shovels, and other garden implements for redistribution.
  • I bunged everything into black plastic bin liners, sealed them for ‘freshness’, washed the mattress, cut up what he had been using for a ground sheet, fitted it to the floor of the van and left the van doors open for the rest of the day.
  • Then the kill is cut up and divided among members of the boat clan, as well as the sail-makers and boatbuilders.
  • boxcars" -- razor knives -- to inflict damage: an Asian girl, it was said, was cut up bad, and a non-skin nearly lost an eye. Chicago Reader
  • The skin should also include all the white pith (leaving the grapefruit flesh that can be cut up, sweetened and marinated in some green chartreuse for another meal like breakfast).
  • Attempting to imitate the hand-painted and lacquered look of Far Eastern imports, they cut up and glued the paintings to plain furniture.
  • Cut skin and fat from the hams, pull meat off the bone and cut up or shred into pieces. Times, Sunday Times
  • The technology at the time required that DNA be cut up into tiny pieces, transferred into bacteria and then put into machines that figured out the genetic code by sorting, by length, the letters of the genetic code: A, T, G and C, also known as adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine. The New, Fast Gene Machine
  • How do you cut up and wrap a haunch of venison without water?
  • _Pollo en padella_ are spring chickens cut up and fried with tomatoes, large sweet chillies, and white wine. The Gourmet's Guide to Europe
  • He'll let nineteen go by without batting an eye, and mebbe the twentieth, just because he's feeling frisky, he'll cut up over like a range cayuse. Chapter XI
  • When the pie is baked, take six yolks of eggs, some white-wine or verjuyce, and make a caudle of this, but not too thick, cut up the lid, put it in, and stir them well together whilst the eggs and pumpion be not perceived, and so serve it up. The accomplisht cook or, The art & mystery of cookery
  • Having cut up the Muscles, and the _Peritonæum_, they found the Cawl schirous, and somewhat carnous, and about two Fingers breadth thick. Tractus de Hermaphrodites Or, A Treatise of Hermaphrodites
  • For his new, large-scale collages, for instance, he cut up hundreds of his photos in small geometric shapes, which he randomly taped together in compositions that resemble hard-edge abstract paintings.
  • Once the francolins have been cut up, put them into the broth in the pot, but they should first be cooked in a kettle.
  • Let's cut up the chicken and make some soup.
  • Cut up word arranger that can give you extra advantage when it comes to writing liptikl is tool that helps songwriters, poets, copywriters or any other kind of creative writer gain extra advantage. Softpedia - Windows - All
  • Alongside such worthy metaphysical dilemmas come great scenes, primarily involving terrified neds tied to chairs in basements while the Clint character threatens to cut up their kids.
  • They should cut up his membership card. Times, Sunday Times
  • When the whale is cut up, the head resembles that of the mysterious Sphynx.
  • Among many other initiatives, within months she had installed windlass lifts for the food, banned the dirt-carrying crinolines worn by the nursing staff, piped hot water and cut up worn chair covers for dishcloths.
  • There actually looked to be enough meat left on the bones of her rabbit to cut up and fry along with some roots she found while hunting to supply a basic breakfast.
  • Looks like unravelled balaclava helmets cut up into one-foot lengths.
  • First, cut up all the veggies -- carrots, green beans, onions, broccoli and whatever else looks stir-fryable -- and chop up the tofu into little cubes. BlogHer
  • All of the 120 or more silver bowls, dishes, cups, flagons and spoons were cut up, crushed, or broken.
  • You check yourself and discover you've torn a trouser leg and your knee is bleeding and your knuckles are cut up.
  • Note: Hard cheeses and semihard cheeses such as Cheddar, Monterey Jack, and Swiss should be coarsely grated; soft cheeses such as Brie, goat, and cream cheese should be cut up or crumbled. SARA MOULTON’S EVERYDAY FAMILY DINNERS
  • Among Mollusks, the lower Bivalves, that is, the Brachiopods and Bryozoa, still prevailed, while Ammonites continued to be very numerous, differing from the earlier ones chiefly in the ever-increasing complications of their inner partitions, which become so deeply involuted and cut upon their margins, before the type disappears, as to make an intricate tracery of very various patterns on the surface of these shells. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 70, August, 1863
  • German doctors and cut up by German surgeons in German sanatoria and health resorts, and I am quite sure that it never occurred to any one of these hundreds of thousands that their little children when in the educational institutions of these "Huns" were in any way in danger. New York Times Current History: The European War, Vol 2, No. 1, April, 1915 April-September, 1915
  • It was nicely cut up by the time we'd finished! The Sun
  • Let us cut up bushes and briers, pile them before the door and set fire to them, and smoke that auld devil's dam as if she were to be reested for bacon. The Black Dwarf
  • Down came the Scots, and they were cut up at Flodden, by Surrey, later made Duke of Norfolk: the Norfolk that was then, not the Norfolk that is now, that sinewy little twitcher constantly twitching toward his advantage. Cromwell & Wolsey: From 'Wolf Hall'
  • Besides, the ranch included the clay-pit, and it would give him the whip-hand over Holdsworthy if he ever tried to cut up any didoes. Chapter IX
  • Article wish you to have a good trip...To railroad train late point two hour the passenger who mean cut up rough , please toward that sow protest of kitchen inside.
  • This piece of material may be cut up to make a pair of trousers.
  • I cut up her fish and squoosh her potato up with butter and salt. TROPIC OF NIGHT
  • Buying meat already cut up and neatly wrapped in cellophane can lead people to forget that meat was once an animal whose treatment, in life and death, is carefully outlined by Jewish law. Sue Fishkoff: The New Jewish Food Movement: Jews Who Meet What They Eat
  • They should cut up his membership card. Times, Sunday Times
  • This piece of material may be cut up to make a pair of trousers.
  • She cut up the carrots and put them in the pot.
  • Heaps of snow had been cut up by vehicles into mushy mud.
  • Competition was keen as the youngsters negotiated the testing courses that easily cut up following heavy overnight rain and made for slippy underfoot conditions.
  • That piece of cloth will cut up into a jacket.
  • I looked down at the chicken I had cut up and skinned, and got another board out to cut onions up in.
  • For added zing, cut up your extra escarole for a side salad with tomatoes, garbanzos, and Italian dressing.
  • The woman cut up the watermelon and shared it out among the four children.
  • This piece of material may be cut up to make a pair of trousers.
  • The garrulous storeowner sometimes cut up summer sausage and cheese and joined us on the porch where we tilted back frosty green soda bottles and solved the problems of the world.
  • There was a cut upon his forehead, and they had been wetting his hair, which lay bedabbled and entangled on the pillow. Dombey and Son
  • A fabulous narrative is introduced here, that, when the king of the Veientians was offering sacrifice, the voice of the aruspex, declaring that the victory was given to him who should cut up the entrails of that victim, having been heard in the mine, incited the The History of Rome, Books 01 to 08
  • I got/was cut up several times on the motorway this morning - I've never seen such dangerous driving!
  • The heavy truck cut up the new lawn.
  • The pitch cut up badly while shortly before throw-in we had a heavy shower of hailstones.
  • Here the attendants do everything for the visitor; cut up his _pirog_ (meat, or fish patty), so that he may eat it with his fork; pour out his tea, fill his _chibouk_, and even bring it to him ready lighted. Russia As Seen and Described by Famous Writers
  • Let's cut up the chicken and make some soup.
  • Richard cut up the cocaine into two lines with a bank card he took from his wallet.
  • People might say they are calm but the way we've cut up the landscape here is raw, brutal, hillsides of houses brushing right up against the forest.
  • Also, Clint and Morgan begin their journey in the film as the result of a prostitute's being cut up, and their motivation is at least somewhat informed by a sense of righting the wrong done to her ... a sense of compassion. How Far is Too Far?
  • There are also clear signs that much of the mammoth bone had been cut up with flint tools. BRITAIN BC: Life In Britain and Ireland before the Romans
  • He dropped his stack of papers and envelopes onto the table, and took my plate to cut up the beef, cheese, and slice the bread thinner without a word.
  • Hollywood was strangely unsentimental about its own history: costumes that would now be considered sacrosanct were frequently cut up and used to mop floors. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dramatic pauses inserted in the dance "La Georgienne, dite La Maupertuis" cut up the phrases into angry gestures. PERFORMING ARTS
  • He also cut up a variety of vegetables, including bell peppers, broccoli, kale, and zucchini, sautéed them with garlic and tamari (a wheat-free soy sauce), and served them over brown rice.
  • The good woman slowly produced a well-seasoned "cutty" pipe, and as she began to cut up a "fill" from a rank-smelling tobacco, replied: "Na, na, laddie, I've come in here for a smoke ma'sel. The Social History of Smoking
  • All the rugs and tablecloths the stores of the town contained were requisitioned for this purpose; green baize and crimson baize, repp curtains and plush, anything, everything remotely suitable, was claimed and cut up to serve as quilts and counterpanes, with the result that the beds looked picturesquely, if not grotesquely, gay. With the Guards' Brigade from Bloemfontein to Koomati Poort and Back
  • Once the egg mixture has been tempered with the garlic broth, you cut up an inch off of a baguette, letting the bread rise to the top of the bowl.

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