English language

How to pronounce tut in English?

Toggle Transcript
Type Words
Synonyms tsk, tut-tut
Type of emit, let loose, let out, utter

Examples of tut

tut
The tut-tutting spread to America in 1929, when he published Marriage and Morals.
From the time.com
Some might tut about the expensive consequences of such irresponsible risk-taking.
From the telegraph.co.uk
Stop behaving like a pair of tut-tutting old dowagers gossiping in the salons.
From the nzherald.co.nz
The OAS chief tut-tutted, calling on the authorities to ensure an impartial trial.
From the economist.com
Each of the 14 guilds at TUT serve the students in their respective study program.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Commentators who marvelled at his 20 years in charge now tut and shake their heads.
From the economist.com
So let's not try to cut up inexperienced cyclists or cluck and tut as we pass them.
From the guardian.co.uk
Courtiers might titter and tut, but there was nothing anyone could really do.
From the guardian.co.uk
We now moralise and tut-tut and think men like this are sick and need medical help.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
  • Tsk: utter `tsk,' `tut,' or `tut-tut,' as in disapproval
  • In geometry, the truncated tetrahedron is an Archimedean solid. It has 4 regular hexagonal faces, 4 regular triangular faces, 12 vertices and 18 edges.
  • Tutting is the name given to a contemporary abstract interpretive street dance style that exploits the body's ability to create geometric positions and movements, predominantly with the use of right angles. ...
  • A tutorial; To make a tut tut sound of disapproval
  • (Tutting) A set of moves that involve creating and manipulating right angles with the sticks.
  • Hassock. [hassock: 1. a thick, firmly padded cushion, in particular: a footstool chiefly british a cushion for kneeling on in church 2. a firm clump of grass or matted vegetation in marshy or boggy ground]
  • (like but). One of the 100 corporeal members of Caligastia's staff (see Ang). Tut headed the governors of advanced tribal relations. (748,2)[66:5.21]
  • Time under tension, or in other words, the time that the muscles are working. This can refer to the time during a single exercise or for the workout as a whole. As the weight increases, the TUT will decrease.