The verb 'cut' is among the most frequently used and semantically versatile words in English, yet it has one of the most mysterious etymological histories of any common English word. Unlike most basic verbs, which can be traced in unbroken descent from Old English, 'cut' appears suddenly in the written record in the thirteenth century with no Old English predecessor.
Middle English 'cutten' (also spelled 'kitten,' 'kutten,' and 'kytten') is first attested around 1200 in early Middle English texts. The word arrived fully formed, immediately competing with and ultimately displacing the established Old English verbs for cutting: 'ceorfan' (to carve, cut — which survives only as 'carve' with a narrowed meaning), 'snīþan' (to cut, which disappeared entirely from standard English), and 'sceran' (to shear, cut — which survives as 'shear' with a specialized meaning). The rapidity and completeness of this displacement is remarkable in the history of English.
The most widely accepted theory traces 'cut' to a Scandinavian source, probably Old Norse *kuta or a closely related North Germanic form. Direct evidence includes Swedish dialectal 'kuta' (to cut with a knife) and Norwegian dialectal 'kuta' (to cut), both of which point to a North Germanic verb that was not recorded in the Old Norse literary corpus but evidently existed in spoken dialects. The borrowing fits the broader pattern of Norse loanwords flooding into English during and after the Danelaw period (9th–11th centuries), though many of these loans did not appear in writing until the 12th or 13th century when Middle English scribal practices began recording everyday spoken vocabulary.
An alternative theory proposes a connection to Old French 'couteau' (knife) or Latin 'cultellus' (small knife), but this is generally rejected on phonological grounds. The French and Latin words derive from Latin 'culter' (knife, plowshare), from PIE *kelh₁- (to strike), and the sound correspondences do not match the English form. The resemblance between 'cut' and 'couteau' appears to be coincidental.
The phonological form of 'cut' is notable for its simplicity — a single syllable with a short vowel, following the CVC pattern that characterizes the most basic stratum of English vocabulary. The past tense and past participle are identical with the base form ('cut/cut/cut'), making it one of English's uninflected irregular verbs, a small class that includes 'put,' 'shut,' 'let,' 'set,' and 'hit.' This zero-change pattern in the past tense may have facilitated the word's rapid adoption: its morphological simplicity made it easy to use.
The semantic range of 'cut' in modern English is extraordinary. The Oxford English Dictionary lists over seventy distinct senses, making it one of the most polysemous verbs in the language. The physical sense of severing with a sharp instrument is primary, but metaphorical extensions radiate outward in every direction. One can cut a class (absent oneself), cut a deal (negotiate), cut a figure (present an appearance), cut corners
In the history of filmmaking, 'cut' became the fundamental term for editing. A film 'cut' is where one shot ends and another begins, derived from the literal cutting of film strips and splicing them together. The director's call 'Cut!' to end a take preserves this connection. The term 'director's cut' refers to the version of a film as the director intended it before studio editing. This cinematic vocabulary has fed back into everyday language: 'cut to' means
The compound 'cutlass,' despite its appearance, is not derived from 'cut' but from French 'coutelas,' from Latin 'cultellus' (small knife). However, folk etymology has reinforced the association, and English speakers have always felt 'cutlass' to be transparently related to 'cut.' Similarly, 'cutlet' comes from French 'côtelette' (small rib), not from 'cut,' though the coincidence of form and meaning is seductive.
The noun 'cut' developed from the verb by the sixteenth century, with senses ranging from an incision or wound to a share of profits (one's 'cut') to a style or fashion (the 'cut' of a garment). The sense of social rejection — 'the cut direct,' deliberately refusing to acknowledge someone — emerged in the eighteenth century and reflects the metaphor of severing a social connection.
In sports, 'cut' has developed specialized meanings across multiple disciplines. In golf, a 'cut' is a stroke that curves from left to right. In cricket, the 'cut' is a batting stroke played to the off side. In American football, a 'cut' is a sudden change of direction by a runner. In basketball, a player 'cuts' to the basket by making
The phrase 'cut and dried' (meaning predetermined, settled in advance) originated in the seventeenth century, referring to herbs that had been cut and dried for sale, as opposed to fresh-growing ones. 'Cutting edge,' meaning the forefront of innovation, transfers the literal sharpest part of a blade to the metaphorical leading point of progress. Both phrases demonstrate how deeply the imagery of cutting permeates English thought.
The word's grammatical versatility is also notable. 'Cut' functions as a verb (cut the bread), a noun (a deep cut), an adjective (cut flowers), and an adverb in compounds (clear-cut). Few English words serve so many grammatical roles while maintaining such a clear semantic core. This versatility, combined with its phonological simplicity and wide