See also: cut away and cut-away

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Deverbal from cut away.

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

cutaway (not comparable)

  1. (computer graphics) Having selected portions of the outside removed so as to give an impression of the interior.
    • 2004 January, CADalyst:
      While it used to take several seconds to generate a single cutaway view in a complex freeform model, you can now view them just about instantly by dynamically scrolling and rotating a plane forward and backward through an object.

Translations edit

Noun edit

cutaway (plural cutaways)

 
cutaway
  1. (television) The interruption of a continuously filmed action by inserting a view of something else.
    • 2021 September 22, Caroline Siede, “Dear Evan Hansen is a misfire on just about every level”, in AV Club[1]:
      the director struggles to jazz up his stilted blocking with clumsy montage cutaways, which are only effective in the upbeat, darkly funny number “Sincerely, Me,” in which Evan dreams up a dance-filled fantasy of his fake friendship with Connor.
    1. (television) A cut to a shot of person listening to a speaker so that the audience can see the listener's reaction.
      • 2004 October 18, The New Yorker:
        Despite a pre-debate “memorandum of understanding” between the Bush campaign and the Kerry campaign that there would be no televised “cutaways” or reaction shots []
  2. A coat with a tapered frontline.
  3. A diagram or model having outer layers removed so as to show the interior
    • 1959 March, “New Reading on Railways: The Railwayman's Diesel Manual. By William F. Bolton. G. H. Lake. 7s. 6d.”, in Trains Illustrated, page 172:
      [...] The two assets of the book are clear explanation, and a multitude of extremely helpful diagrams, some in two colours, and cutaway photographs; these clearly unravel a difficult subject for the layman, as well as the student engineman for whom the primer is chiefly designed.
  4. (music) An indentation in the upper bout of a guitar's body adjacent to the neck, allowing easier access to the upper frets.

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