It doesn't meet your expectations.
to finalize a deal
The expression is actually "to cut a sorry figure." It means to be ashamed of one's person or actions.
The idiom is "cut you short." That means to interrupt someone. Example: "I hate to cut you short, but I am due back at the office."
Stop screaming at my mother, it isnt her fault.
To Cut a Sorry Figure means, to Make a Poor Impression. Example - "Joe cut a sorry figure when he showed up for his job interview in blue jeans and an old T-shirt."
To cut implies a single action, to incise or to slice, ex: to cut ones finger. To cut up necessarily means to cut into pieces, ex: to cut up a piece of paper. An additional meaning for cut up is a colloquial expression meaning to joke around/ horseplay
It is an expression that describes the shape into which something is cut. A potato wedge, an apple wedge, a fruit wedge, a cheese wedge, and other examples are possible.
This is a reference to a form of execution. Heads roll when they are cut off of a body. The figurative meaning is that positions or jobs are going to be "killed off" and people are going to be fired.
no, there isnt, just poor slowpokes with their tales cut off...
The expression Cut to the quick has two different meanings. The most common of these uses "the quick" in the sense of a very sensitive part of the body, and refers to UNDER THE FINGERNAIL. The expression "cut to the quick" when used in this way means to hurt, deeply distress or emotionally wound. Variations of this expression such as "touched to the quick" or "stung to the quick" can be dated but to the early 1500's, although the current "cut to the quick" was considered a cliché from around the 1850's onwards. The second meaning, although not so commonly used, is used as another way to say get to the point. This version of "cut to the quick" is also known as "cut to the quip".
not really, the thinner the felt, the more likely it will cut good
coup de grace ,French word meaning to put out of one's misery. the guillotine or execution delivered such a blow. Literally ' cut of grace'