κ²μ
μ¬μ μΈμ΄λ₯Ό μ ννμΈμ
to cut off
[phrase form: cut]
01
μλ₯΄λ€, λλ€
to use a sharp object like scissors or a knife on something to remove a piece from its edge or ends
Transitive: to cut off sth
μμλ€
The sculptor carefully cut off excess clay to shape the figurine according to the design.
μ‘°κ°κ°λ μ€κ³μ λ°λΌ μ‘°κ°μμ λ§λ€κΈ° μν΄ μ¬λΆμ μ ν λ₯Ό μ‘°μ¬μ€λ½κ² μλΌλμ΅λλ€.
02
μλΌλ΄λ€, μ λ¨νλ€
to remove a part of the body, tissue, or organ through a surgical intervention
Transitive: to cut off a body part or organ
μμλ€
In cases of extreme frostbite, amputation may be necessary to cut off the frost-damaged extremity.
κ·Ήμ¬ν λμμ κ²½μ°, λμμΌλ‘ μμλ μ¬μ§λ₯Ό μ λ¨νκΈ° μν΄ μ λ¨μ΄ νμν μ μμ΅λλ€.
03
λλ€, λ°©ν΄νλ€
to abruptly stop speaking or interrupt someone in the middle of their speech
Transitive: to cut off sb
μμλ€
I tried to explain my viewpoint, but I was cut off by the loud noise outside.
λλ λ΄ κ΄μ μ μ€λͺ
νλ €κ³ νμ§λ§, λ°μ μλλ¬μ΄ μμμ μν΄ λμ΄μ‘λ€.
04
λλ€, μ€λ¨νλ€
to stop providing a specific resource
Transitive: to cut off a resource
μμλ€
The drought conditions forced authorities to cut off water supply to conserve resources.
κ°λ 쑰건μΌλ‘ μΈν΄ λΉκ΅μ μμμ 보쑴νκΈ° μν΄ λ¬Ό 곡κΈμ μ°¨λ¨ν΄μΌ νμ΅λλ€.
05
λλ€, μ€λ¨νλ€
to end a phone call while the other person is still on the line
Transitive: to cut off a phone call
μμλ€
Mike realized he dialed the wrong number, so he quickly cut off the call to avoid any awkwardness.
λ§μ΄ν¬λ μλͺ»λ λ²νΈλ₯Ό λλ λ€λ κ²μ κΉ¨λ«κ³ , μ΄μν¨μ νΌνκΈ° μν΄ λΉ λ₯΄κ² μ νλ₯Ό λμμ΅λλ€.
06
μ μ 곡μ μ€λ¨νλ€, μλΉμ€λ₯Ό κ±°λΆνλ€
to cease serving alcoholic drinks to an individual
Transitive: to cut off sb
μμλ€
The responsible bartender chose to cut off the visibly intoxicated customer, offering water and assistance instead.
μ±
μκ° μλ λ°ν
λλ νμ€ν μ·¨ν κ³ κ°μ λκΈ°λ‘ μ ννκ³ λμ λ¬Όκ³Ό λμμ μ 곡νλ€.
07
μλΌλ΄λ€, κ³ λ¦½μν€λ€
to become separated or isolated from something or someone, often by an obstacle or barrier
Transitive: to cut off a place or area
μμλ€
The army cut off the enemy βs retreat by blocking the path.
κ΅°λλ κΈΈμ λ§μ μ μ ν΄λ‘λ₯Ό μ°¨λ¨νλ€.
08
μμμμ μ μΈνλ€, μ μ°μ λ¬Όλ €μ£Όμ§ μλ€
to exclude someone from getting one's possessions after death
Transitive: to cut off an heir
μμλ€
Facing family disputes, she decided to cut off certain members and distribute her assets to trusted friends.
κ°μ‘± κ°μ λΆμμ μ§λ©΄νμ¬, κ·Έλ
λ νΉμ ꡬμ±μμ λμ΄λ΄κΈ°λ‘ κ²°μ νκ³ μμ μ μμ°μ λ―Ώμ μ μλ μΉκ΅¬λ€μκ² λλμ΄ μ£ΌκΈ°λ‘ νμ΅λλ€.
09
μ°¨λ¨νλ€, μ§λ‘λ₯Ό λ°©ν΄νλ€
to aggressively and dangerously drive one's vehicle in the path of a moving vehicle
Dialect
American
Transitive: to cut off a person or vehicle
Informal
μμλ€
The motorcyclist got frustrated when a car abruptly cut him off while changing lanes.
ν μ°¨κ° κ°μκΈ° μ°¨μ μ λ³κ²½νλ©΄μ κ·Έλ₯Ό μλΌ λμ λ μ€ν λ°μ΄ μ΄μ μλ μ’μ κ°μ λκΌλ€.
10
λλ€, κ΄κ³λ₯Ό λλ€
to end a relationship, particularly a friendly one
Transitive: to cut off a person or a relationship
μμλ€
Realizing the toxicity of the friendship, he made the difficult decision to cut off his long-time buddy.
μ°μ μ λ
μ±μ κΉ¨λ«κ³ , κ·Έλ μ€λ μΉκ΅¬μ κ΄κ³λ₯Ό λλ μ΄λ €μ΄ κ²°μ μ λ΄λ Έλ€.
11
λΉΌμλ€, λλ€
to deny someone or something what they need or want
Transitive: to cut off a need or privilege
μμλ€
In response to the misbehavior, the teacher threatened to cut off recess privileges for the unruly students.
λμ νλμ λν λμμΌλ‘, μ μλμ λ§μ λ£μ§ μλ νμλ€μ μ¬λ μκ° νΉκΆμ μ€λ¨νκ² λ€κ³ μννμ΅λλ€.
cut-off
01
μλ¦°, μ λ¨λ
physically removed from a larger whole through an act of slicing, severing, or trimming
μμλ€
The cut-off cable was no longer usable.
μ λ¨λ μΌμ΄λΈμ λ μ΄μ μ¬μ©ν μ μμλ€.



























