cutter

Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word cutter. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word cutter, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say cutter in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word cutter you have here. The definition of the word cutter will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofcutter, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
See also: Cutter

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
A gaff cutter with a staysail and genoa jib set

Etymology

From Middle English cutter, cuttere, kutter; equivalent to cut +‎ -er.

Pronunciation

Noun

cutter (plural cutters)

  1. A person or device that cuts (in various senses).
    a stone cutter; a die cutter
    In some CNC programs, the diameter of the cutter (such as an end mill) is handled by cutter compensation codes.
    • 1982, The Movies, page 288:
      The intervening years, however, were spent as a cutter. He was, indeed, one of the best film editors in the business, winning an Academy Award for Body and Soul (1947).
    • 1988, Jorge Amado, Home is the Sailor, page 55:
      Chico Pacheco kept repeating the phrase between clenched teeth, lamenting the wasted days of his youth; he had been a notorious cutter of classes.
  2. (nautical) A single-masted, fore-and-aft rigged, sailing vessel with at least two headsails, and a mast set further aft than that of a sloop.
  3. A foretooth; an incisor.
    • 1691, John Ray, The Wisdom of God Manifested in the Works of the Creation. , London: Samuel Smith, , →OCLC:
      the Cutters and Eye-teeth have usually but one Root
  4. A heavy-duty motor boat for official use.
    a coastguard cutter.
  5. (nautical) A ship's boat, used for transport ship-to-ship or ship-to-shore.
  6. (cricket) A ball that moves sideways in the air, or off the pitch, because it has been cut.
  7. (baseball) A cut fastball.
  8. (slang) A ten-pence piece. So named because it is the coin most often sharpened by prison inmates to use as a weapon.
  9. (informal) A person who practices self-injury by making cuts in the flesh.
    • 2013, Leona Davis, Past, Future, and End, FriesenPress, page 33:
      After I got out of the mental institution I was looking at t.v. show I was looking it a teenage girl who was a cutter her arm look just like my arm.
  10. (medicine, colloquial, slang, humorous or derogatory) A surgeon.
    Synonym: slasher
  11. An animal yielding inferior meat, with little or no external fat and marbling.
    Coordinate terms: canner, darkcutter
    • 1905, United States. Bureau of Corporations, Report of the Commissioner of Corporations on the Beef Industry, page 89:
      Bulls and cows used for breeding, when finally sent to market, are inferior for dressed-beef production. Bulls are demanded especially for sausage and similar products. Cows are largely used as cutters and canners []
  12. (obsolete) An officer in the exchequer who notes by cutting on the tallies the sums paid.
  13. (obsolete) A ruffian; a bravo; a destroyer.
    • Martin Parker, A True Tale of Robin Hood
      So being outlaw'd (as 'tis told), / He with a crew went forth / Of lusty cutters, bold and strong, / And robbed in the north.
    • 1633, A Match at Midnight (disputed authorship)
      He's out of cash, and thou know'st by cutter's law, / We are bound to relieve one another.
  14. (obsolete) A kind of soft yellow brick, easily cut, and used for facework.
  15. A light sleigh drawn by one horse.
    • 2007, Carrie A. Meyer, Days on the Family Farm, U of Minnesota Press, page 55:
      Throughout much of the winter, the sled or the cutter was the vehicle of choice. Emily and Joseph had a cutter, for traveling in style in snow.
  16. (television) A flag or similar instrument for blocking light.
    • 2012, John Jackman, Lighting for Digital Video and Television, page 86:
      Flags and other cutters allow the DP or gaffer to throw large controlled shadows on parts of the scene.
  17. (MLE) A knife.
  18. (Maine) An active child.
    Synonyms: splash, splasher, jooker, nank, shank, bassy, rambo, pokey, chete, ying
    • 2017 July 25, Farley (lyrics and music), “Out Here”‎, 0:42–0:47:
      Late night, take a flow, tryna find the rats
      Twelve inch cutter in and out, then Imma ride them back
    • 2021 August 16, (Mali Strip) Killa Kurse x AR x Rondo (lyrics and music), “Buck aii LGR diss”‎, 1:23–1:28:
      Hop out the ride with things and stuff
      Back the longest cutter, watch him cut him, [grate their neek trips?] up
    • 2021 November 29, KMulla (lyrics and music), “Mutual Feeling”‎, 1:24–1:27:
      […] swing my cutter
      Get man down if he is on my brother
  19. (intactivism, derogatory) A supporter of infant circumcision or female genital mutilation; pro-circumcisionist.
Cutter (sense 15)

Derived terms

Translations

French

French Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia fr

Pronunciation

Noun

cutter m (plural cutters)

  1. utility knife, box cutter, Stanley knife (tool used to cut)
    Synonyms: couteau à lame rétractable, (Canada) exacto
  2. (nautical) cutter (vessel)

Further reading

Italian

Italian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia it

Etymology

Unadapted borrowing from English cutter.

Noun

cutter m

  1. utility knife, box cutter, Stanley knife (tool used to cut)
    Synonyms: taglierino, trincetto
  2. (nautical) cutter (vessel)

Romanian

Noun

cutter n (plural cuttere)

  1. Alternative form of cuter

Declension