1 a pair of jeans or trousers that has had the bottom parts of the legs removed --
3 a road that leaves another and provides a shorter route: --
5 a situation in which you stop doing, making, paying, or supplying something: --
The country's government is in danger of collapse because of the international cutoff of revenue and aid.
The dispute over prices has led to a temporary cut-off in deliveries.
Four discrete groups were formed on the basis of whether participants fell into the top 33% cutoffs on either the age 8 or age 17 years antisocial measures.
As such, nominalists are likely to interpret behaviors as falling along a continuum of social acceptability, to consider diagnostic cutoffs as arbitrary, and to be wary of diagnosis altogether.
If scores for all three domains reach specified cutoffs, and if there is evidence of developmental abnormality before the age of 36 months, an autism spectrum diagnosis is suggested.
Low income cutoffs from 1992 to 2001 and low income measures from 1991 to 2000.
The second induces or deduces acceptable cutoffs for each criterion.
The weak second harmonic appearing in the spectrum is a measure of numerical accuracy that needs to be eliminated by decreasing the time step and increasing other convergence cutoffs.
The resonator is intrinsic to the plasma since it is formed by the cutoffs, which are intrinsic to the plasma.
Owing to the presence of cutoffs and/or resonances, the curve may be discontinuous.