گزارش خطا در معنی کلمه 'cut up'

برای اصلاح خطاهایی که در معانی است، کافی است بر روی آیکن کلیک کنید. برای وارد کردن معانی جدید در انتها صفحه در قسمت 'معانی جدید' معانی خود را وارد کرده و بر روی دکمه 'ارسال' کلیک کنید .

english

1 general:: 1. Divide into smaller parts, break the continuity of, as in These meetings have cut up my whole day. [c. 1800] 2. Severely censure or criticize, as in The reviewer cut up the book mercilessly. [Mid-1700s] 3. be cut up. Be distressed or saddened, as in I was terribly cut up when she left. [Mid-1800s] Charles Dickens used this idiom in A Christmas Carol (1844): "Scrooge was not so dreadfully cut up by the sad event." 4. Behave in a playful, comic, or boisterous way, as in On the last night of camp the children usually cut up. [Late 1800s] 5. cut up rough. Act in a rowdy, angry, or violent way, as in After a beer or two the boys began to cut up rough. [Slang; first half of 1800s]

American Heritage Idioms

2 general:: Phrase(s): cut someone up Fig. to make someone laugh. • That comedian’s routine really cut me up. • Tommy’s rude noises cut the whole class up, but not the teacher.

McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs

3 general:: Phrase(s): cut up (about someone or something) Sl. emotionally upset about someone or something. • She was all cut up about her divorce. • You could see how cut up she was.

McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs

4 general:: Phrase(s): cut someone or something up Fig. to criticize someone or something severely. • Jane is such a gossip. She was really cutting Mrs. Jones up. • The professor really cut up my essay.

McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs

5 general:: Phrase(s): cut up 1. to act wildly; to show off and be troublesome; to act like a clown. • Tom, Billy! Stop cutting up, or I'll send you to the principal's office. • If you spent more time studying than cutting up, you'd get better grades. 2. Go to cut up (about someone or something).

McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs

6 general:: Phrase(s): cut someone up 1. Lit. to gash or carve on someone by cutting. • The thugs cut him up badly, just for talking back. • They cut up their victim into pieces. 2. Fig. to cause someone severe emotional distress. • That rebuke really cut me up. • The critic really cut up the performer.

McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs

معانی جدید
نام و نام خانوادگی :
پست الکترونیک :
کد امنیتی بالا را وارد کنید :