cutoff vs sit-down

cutoff

adj
  • Constituting a limit or ending. 

  • Designating a score or value demarcating the presence (or absence) of a disease, condition, or similar. 

noun
  • A cessation in a flow or activity. 

  • A road, path or channel that provides a shorter or quicker path; a shortcut. 

  • The point at which something terminates or to which it is limited. 

  • A device that stops the flow of a current. 

  • A device for saving steam by regulating its admission to the cylinder (see quotation at cut-off). 

  • Shorts made by cutting off the legs from trousers. 

  • The player who acts directly before the player on the button pre-flop. 

  • A horizontal line separating sections of the page. 

  • A cutoff point (cutoff value, threshold value, cutpoint): the amount set by an operational definition as the transition point between states in a discretization or dichotomization. 

sit-down

adj
  • Intended to be done, used, consumed etc. while sitting. 

noun
  • An act of sitting down, especially with other people in some form of social exchange. 

  • A sit-in, a protest of civil disobedience by people sitting and refusing to move. 

How often have the words cutoff and sit-down occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )