Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for cut capers. Search instead for petnapers.
Synonyms

cut capers

Idioms  
  1. Also, cut a caper. Frolic or romp, as in The children cut capers in the pile of raked leaves. The noun caper comes from the Latin for “goat,” and the allusion is to act in the manner of a young goat clumsily frolicking about. The expression was first recorded in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night (1:3): “Faith, I can cut a caper.”


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

On this broad platform the infant publication immediately began to cut capers.

From Time Magazine Archive

Some bartenders in Yokohama and Kobe dress up on Christmas night like Santa Claus, serve drinks, cut capers.

From Time Magazine Archive

Of course, I had to admit that Lord Alfred Douglas, before he began to cut capers in the hinterland of Fleet Street, had been a poet.

From Books and Persons Being Comments on a Past Epoch 1908-1911 by Bennett, Arnold

And thenceforward the nimble gentleman danced upon bell-ropes, vaulted from steeple to steeple, and cut capers out of one dignity to another.

From Andrew Marvell by Morley, John

"And you won't kick up, and rear up and cut capers, like a horse?"

From The Red Moccasins A Story by Heady, Morrison