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[ US /ˈkəˌtɔf/ ]
[ UK /kˈʌtɒf/ ]
NOUN
  1. a route shorter than the usual one
  2. a designated limit beyond which something cannot function or must be terminated
  3. a device that terminates the flow in a pipe

How To Use cutoff In A Sentence

  • If your cut exposes the hollow portion of the door, you must reinstall the solid-wood rail from the cutoff.
  • Second, blazers do not work with absolutely everything (said cutoffs and crop tops, especially). Times, Sunday Times
  • It calculates the cutoff wavelength and single-mode bandwidth at the change of the ridge dimensions, gives the dominant mode field pattern and the corresponding curve of the deformation vs.
  • Furthermore the constructed peptide is completely encompassed within the cutoff radius.
  • This brand of "austerity" is all the more notable because, in a sense, the advertising proved true: Compared to most of its European brethren and certainly to the U.S., the U.K. is embarking on one of the world's sharpest cutoffs from the recent deficit-spending explosion, which is likely to mean nearly a half-million public-sector job losses over the next five years. The Cuts: A Crisis Wasted
  • In short, the cutoff date for analog TV may not be set in stone, but consumers are transitioning on their own terms.
  • If your cut exposes the hollow portion of the door, you must reinstall the solid-wood rail from the cutoff.
  • Labor activists say that although there are no legal age cutoffs, the industries prefer to hire young and malleable workers.
  • The US has announced a cutoff of military aid to the country.
  • Orioles right fielder Ken Singleton fielded the ball off the wall and threw to his cutoff man Rich Dauer who in turn fired the ball home.
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