Hi everyone, i'm looking for a more polite/formal version of cutting to the chase. the sentence i want to write goes like: I forgot to ask about this: The cut out shape derived from using a die.
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A method for punching or cutting out any special shapes by using a metal form that is called a die. Although forefront can have a wider meaning than cutting edge, i don't think either term fits here. The way you've phrased it seems a bit illogical.
Assuming those two mean exactly the same.
Cutting to the chase, i think. i need to state this first, and then. I'm looking for an onomatopoeia that represents the sound of an axe striking a tree (e.g. When a tree is being felled). To describe this problem, is there any difference between the following 3 options, or are they synonymous?
Hi, hope you can help me again. Can be used with paper or. Hi, folks, when you're in a queue and someone rudely cuts in somewhere in the middle of the queue and not at the end of it, is this person jumping the queue or cutting the queue? Which is more often used, cut the apple in half or cut the apple into half?
Both forefront and cutting edge refer to progress, being in the vanguard of change.
I considered clang and thud, but. Cutting it close implies some negative consequence: You may miss the bus, or be late to school, or experience some other problem if you. When you say cut off the line, it implies that you were cutting the line off something else, as you would when cutting parachute line off a branch or something.