cutback

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See also: cut back and cut-back

English

Etymology

cut +‎ back

Noun

cutback (plural cutbacks)

  1. A reduction of some sort in an existing program.
  2. (surfing) Maneuver where the surfer turns and surfs back towards where the wave is breaking.
    • 2005, Matt Warshaw, The Encyclopedia of Surfing, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (→ISBN), page 146:
      The cutback is one of the sport's three fundamental turns, along with the bottom turn and top turn. "It's the purest power move in the book," Australian surf journalist Nick Carroll wrote in 2000.
  3. (roofing) Solvent-thinned bitumen used in cold process roofing adhesives, cements and coatings.
  4. (soccer) An offensive pass played into a position further from the attacking goal line.
    • 2011 January 29, Ian Hughes, “Southampton 1 - 2 Man Utd”, in BBC[1]:
      Lee Barnard swung at Chaplow's cutback and missed completely and then was just too far away to connect with Harding's flashing ball across the face of goal.

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