1 not having any characteristics that would cause doubt or uncertainty: --
In the education category, male-female difference is clear-cut and does not change whichever level of education one chooses to compare.
This was the lesson of the twentieth century; statesmen who believed in clear-cut power politics were stuck back in the nineteenth.
This point is valid not only for finding suitable arrangements in order to investigate an already clear-cut problem, but also for finding the problems themselves.
However, there is no clear-cut way of deciding what constitutes either maximal greatness or absolute perfection.
Changing the perspective to an outsider's view reverses the "charity" inherent in this interpretation into a clear-cut sentence against these postulates.
Qualitative differences are most clear-cut for slipped and painted vases.
In spite of having fewer power resources, client organisations with clear-cut interests may well be more important in explaining the variance between programmes.
Previous, often intensive control programmes have foundered, and we cannot point to a clear-cut example of successful large-scale scrapie control.