A piece of roofing membrane consisting of one or more narrow plies of felt usually moped in hot to seal the edge of insulation at the end of a day's work
{f} break off, amputate, disconnect; make an incision; behead; disinherit; stop, cease; isolate
If you get cut off when you are on the telephone, the line is suddenly disconnected and you can no longer speak to the other person. When you do get through, you've got to say your piece quickly before you get cut off I'm going to cut you off now because we've got lots of callers waiting. = disconnect
To cut someone or something off means to separate them from things that they are normally connected with. One of the goals of the campaign is to cut off the elite Republican Guard from its supplies The storm has cut us off. = isolate + cut off cut off Without a car we still felt very cut off
If you cut something off, you remove it with a knife or a similar tool. Mrs Kreutz cut off a generous piece of the meat He cut me off a slice He threatened to cut my hair off