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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
cutlass
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A swarthy fellow with ringlets was taking a slash at her with a heavy cutlass.
▪ Pangas were the big cutlasses they used for agriculture-and the violent settling of a quarrel.
▪ Some held bloody cutlasses drooping in their hands.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cutlass

Cutlass \Cut"lass\ (k[u^]t"las), n.; pl. Cutlasses (-[e^]z). [F. coutelas (cf. It. coltellaccio), augm. fr. L. cuttellus a small knife, dim. of culter knife. See Colter, and cf. Curtal ax.] A short, heavy, curving sword, used in the navy. See Curtal ax.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
cutlass

1590s, from Middle French coutelas (16c.), probably from Italian coltellaccio "large knife" (with augmentative suffix -accio), from coltello "knife," from Latin cultellus "small knife," diminutive of culter "knife, plowshare," from PIE *kel-tro-, from root *(s)kel- "to cut" (see scale (n.1)).

Wiktionary
cutlass

n. 1 (context nautical English) A short sword with a curved blade, and a convex edge; once used by sailors when boarding an enemy ship. 2 A similarly shaped tool; a machete.

WordNet
cutlass

n. a short heavy curved sword with one edge; formerly used by sailors [syn: cutlas]

Wikipedia
Cutlass

A cutlass is a short, broad sabre or slashing sword, with a straight or slightly curved blade sharpened on the cutting edge, and a hilt often featuring a solid cupped or basket-shaped guard. It was a common naval weapon during the Age of Sail.

Cutlass (disambiguation)

The cutlass is a type of sword.

Cutlass may also refer to:

In the military:

  • USS Cutlass (SS-478), a submarine of the U.S. Navy built during World War II and later used by the Republic of China (on Taiwan)
  • Vought F7U Cutlass, an unsuccessful carrier-based jet fighter and fighter-bomber flown by the U.S. Navy
  • a nickname for the U.S. Navy's Enlisted Surface Warfare Specialist pin

Other uses:

  • Oldsmobile Cutlass, an automobile line
  • Cessna Cutlass 172RG, a type of light, civilian, single-engined aircraft
  • Cutlass, a term for the machete in the English-speaking Caribbean
  • Cutlass (film), a short 2007 film directed by Kate Hudson
  • Cutlass programming language and application system, developed by the UK's Central Electricity Generating Board in the 1970s and 1980s for the real-time control of power stations
Cutlass (film)

Cutlass is a short drama film which was filmed in 2007, written and directed by Kate Hudson.

Usage examples of "cutlass".

The Biter men, some with short cudgels at the belt, some with a cutlass doled out the day before, looked about them eagerly, waiting for a fight.

Over kilts and loose shirts, all wore knee-long mail hauberks, belted at the hips with thick leather bands sporting huge buckles of brass or polished steel from which depended a sword of some descriptioneverything from native short swords and brass-hilted boarding cutlasses to European and Middle Eastern military brandsat least one each of dirk and dagger and one or more pistols, metal flasks of powder and cour bouilli boxes for lead balls and spanners.

Wulfgar, extending a wand and blasting the huge barbarian square in the chest with a glob of sticky goo that knocked him back against the Cutlass and held him there.

The wall which Harding struck with the hilt of his cutlass sounded solid.

They had just arrived from the principal village, where the bodies of those who fell in the attack were brought, and with grim satisfaction the mutineers learnt that fifty-six men and seven women had been killed and twice as many badly wounded, principally by cutlasses and musket slugs.

Nemo stood his ground as Captain Noseless strode aboard, sweeping his long cutlass from side to side like a harvester cutting grain.

The horses they would ride tonight were hitched to the outside of the wagons, saddled and with muskets and cutlasses in the scabbards, ready for an instant sortie.

As he rode along by the side of the marching regiments, he observed the pikes and cutlasses, and the sheathless bayonets which hung at the belts of the riflemen, and wondered what would happen when it came to close fighting.

With the stockless musket he smashed the arm of a man whose cutlass was swinging toward his head.

The men would have been issued with cutlasses, tomahawks, pikes or pistols, depending what was marked against their name in the general quarter, watch and station bill, which listed the name of every man in the ship and his task for every evolution, whether anchoring, tacking, wearing, furling, reefing or fighting the enemy.

But the cutlass thrust through his belt was as much the symbol of her own unrealized potential, of the castration of her mental bravura, as it was the emblem of the male phallus.

I could lift my cutlass in his defence, fell back upon me, knocked me down in his fall, and expired in a moment.

Camila, her head seamlessly edited to the body of a bandy-legged horsewoman, propped her cutlass on the shoulder of her yak-hide coat and looked at the gathering throng with nervous amusement.

De la Mery inched forward with the cutlass raised till he was level with his pet, now standing on its hind legs.

Cutlasses were useless against dragon-scale, but the pincers of the Blue Horrors, the Termagant daggers, the axes, swords, fangs and claws of the Fiends, did bloody work against the Heavy Troopers.