cutoff
Etymology
cut + off
noun
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The point at which something terminates or to which it is limited. -
(medicine) A cutoff point (cutoff value, threshold value, cutpoint): the amount set by an operational definition as the transition point between states in a discretization or dichotomization.
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A road, path or channel that provides a shorter or quicker path; a shortcut. -
A device that stops the flow of a current. -
A device for saving steam by regulating its admission to the cylinder (see quotation at cut-off). -
A cessation in a flow or activity. If the treatment is approved, a script is written. If the script is approved, it goes into production. But this is usually a long and painful process. A cutoff can take place (and often does) at any step along the way. 1985, Alfred Brenner, The TV Scriptwriter's Handbook, page 144 -
(poker) The player who acts directly before the player on the button pre-flop. -
(fashion, chiefly in the plural) Shorts made by cutting off the legs from trousers. […] I spotted through the window a young woman casually crossing Astor Place wearing a pair of cutoffs, some sandals and — it is fully legal to do this — naked above the waist. 2021-07-22, Guy Trebay, “Suddenly It’s Bare Season”, in The New York Times, →ISSN -
(journalism) A horizontal line separating sections of the page. Light-face type, cutoffs, borders and rules are the universal plan. No black body matter and almost no black headlines appear. 1919, The Washington Newspaper
adj
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Constituting a limit or ending. -
(psychology, medicine) Designating a score or value demarcating the presence (or absence) of a disease, condition, or similar.
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