Significado
To stop wasting time on minor details and go straight to the important part.
Contexto cultural
Efficiency is highly valued in American business culture. 'Cutting to the chase' is seen as a positive trait of a leader. While also used, it is often softened with 'Could we...' to avoid sounding too blunt. Directness can be seen as aggressive. It is better to use 'Let's discuss the main point' instead. Building relationships through small talk is crucial. Cutting to the chase too early can be seen as rude.
Use it sparingly
Don't use it in every conversation, or you will sound impatient.
Watch your tone
Your tone of voice determines if you sound efficient or rude.
Significado
To stop wasting time on minor details and go straight to the important part.
Use it sparingly
Don't use it in every conversation, or you will sound impatient.
Watch your tone
Your tone of voice determines if you sound efficient or rude.
Pair it with 'I'll'
Saying 'I'll cut to the chase' makes it sound like a personal choice rather than a command.
Teste-se
Fill in the blank with the correct phrase.
We don't have much time, so let's _____ the chase.
The idiom is 'cut to the chase'.
Which sentence uses the idiom correctly?
Choose the best option.
The idiom must be used in its fixed form.
Complete the dialogue.
A: I'm not sure if I should tell you this... B: Just _____, I need to know.
Both phrases are acceptable in this context.
Match the situation to the correct response.
Your boss is rambling in a meeting. What do you say?
It is the most professional way to ask for brevity.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Recursos visuais
Banco de exercicios
4 exerciciosWe don't have much time, so let's _____ the chase.
The idiom is 'cut to the chase'.
Choose the best option.
The idiom must be used in its fixed form.
A: I'm not sure if I should tell you this... B: Just _____, I need to know.
Both phrases are acceptable in this context.
Your boss is rambling in a meeting. What do you say?
It is the most professional way to ask for brevity.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Perguntas frequentes
12 perguntasIt depends on the context. In a professional setting, it can be efficient. In a personal setting, it can be rude.
Only if you have a good relationship and the boss values efficiency.
They are synonyms. 'Cut to the chase' is slightly more idiomatic.
No, you must include 'to'.
It is neutral. It's not formal enough for a legal document but fine for a business email.
Apologize and explain you were just trying to save time.
Yes, but it's archaic and not used in modern English.
Use it carefully. It shows you value time but might be seen as pushy.
Yes, it is common in both the US and the UK.
Add 'If you don't mind' or 'Could we' before it.
Yes, it's a very common line in scripts.
No, it is too informal for academic writing.
Frases relacionadas
Get to the point
synonymTo address the main issue.
Bottom line
similarThe final result or main point.
Skip the small talk
similarTo avoid polite, irrelevant conversation.
Beat around the bush
contrastTo avoid the main point.