Of course all the cattle herds had more or less strays among them, so it was easier to cut out one of these than to argue the matter.
While drifting the herd back to the trail we cut out a big lame steer and two stray cows for the Indians, who now left us and followed the beeves which were being driven to their village.
When they declined, he cut out a fat stray cow which had come into the herd down on the North Platte, had her driven in after the wagon, killed and quartered.
When all the dough has been cut out, beat up an egg.
Cut out with a fancy cake-cutter and brush with beaten egg.
Bruised spots should be cut out of peaches and pears.
Wellesley traditions, customs, and spirit pervade the book, either described at some length or indicated by a masterly allusion.
He was informed, on inquiring at the house, that a family of another name now occupied it, and no one could tell where Mr. and Mrs. Dallas had gone.
But it is so long since any one was kind to me or seemed to care.
As you will notice, the soundhole is cut out of a piece of paper which follows the lines of one of the lower corners.
But you who, when beginning to cut out back or belly, having no sort of experience whatever, must use every care possible, and keep calipers No.
For the ancients, time comprises as many undivided periods as our natural perception and our language cut out in it successive facts, each presenting a kind of individuality.
The systems we cut out within it would, properly speaking, not then be parts at all; they would be partial views of the whole.
Moreover, as the intellect itself is cut out of mind by a process of the same kind, it is attuned to this order and complexity, and admires them because it recognizes itself in them.
The bodies we perceive are, so to speak, cut out of the stuff of nature by our perception, and the scissors follow, in some way, the marking of lines along which action might be taken.
It was idle to attempt to cut out bunches of roses while her hand was so feverish, and she trundled up and down the High Street to cool off.
The pattern was of little bunches of pink roses peeping out through trellis work, and it was these which she had just begun to cut out.
In the first case they carry out the impression that the whole thing is cut out of a solid piece of wood, whereas when they are cut sharply down they always suggest cabinet-making, as if a piece had been glued on to form a margin.
In the execution of bunches of rounded forms like grapes there is no special mechanical expedient for doing them quickly and easily; each must be cut out separately, and carved with whatever tools come handiest to their shape and size.
The cross A is cut out entire, and the pieces B, C, D, and E form the larger cross in Fig.
The dotted lines are added merely to show the correct proportions of the figure--a square of 25 cells with the four corner cells cut out.
We have just seen that two crosses of the same size may be cut out of a square in five pieces.
If the puzzle were merely to be cut out of cardboard or wood, there might be no objection to this reversal, but it is quite possible that the material would not admit of being reversed.
This operation is an easy one; the sterno-mastoid edge being once fairly exposed, the nerve is easily seen, and a piece should be cut out at least half an inch in length.
If the tumour is large and of old standing it may be requisite to cut out an elliptical or circular portion of its conjunctival wall.
The old monolithic chapel of the monastery remains, turned into a pigeonry, and with the steps left that gave access to the pulpit, and two pieces of sculpture on a very large scale, cut out of the living rock.
Of course, if several boilers of one size are being made at the same time, the holes in two or more of these plates can be cut out at once.
Its motive and raison d'ĂȘtre is the disposal of the threads of the warp when it is cut out of the frame; these being tied and knotted symmetrically, become an artistic decoration instead of an untidy tangle of threads and thrums.
One should begin by ascertaining whether the needlework was originally intended to be cut out (opus consutum), and so laid on a ground of another material, and worked down and finished there.
The fins and tail are also cut off; and, lastly, the whale-bone is cut out of the mouth.
They then, from under a bank where the snow had drifted thickly and was very hard, cut out a number of slabs like large bricks, about two feet long and six inches thick.
You're cut out for a winner; you can win whatever you want to win.
That Eton captain is cut outof whole cloth; no shoddy there, by Jove!
From that point he saw that it was easy for him to cut out a road towards the south-west.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cut out" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.