cutting edge

a cutting edge

An advantage due to superior skill, ability, or resources. You may not be the fastest, but you have a cutting edge—your stamina.
See also: cutting, edge

cutting edge

1. noun The forefront of technological developments or advancements. The new company I work for is at the cutting edge of medical science. I think some of their new instruments are going to revolutionize the field of medicine.
2. adjective Technologically advanced. When used as an adjective, the phrase is usually hyphenated. With their cutting-edge instruments, I really think this company is going to revolutionize the field of medicine.
See also: cutting, edge
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

cutting edge

Fig. the most forward part of a trend; the leading part of a trend. (Alludes to the edge of a sword. See also on the cutting edge. See also on the bleeding edge.) Fred's invention put him on the cutting edge of the computer chip business.
See also: cutting, edge
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

(be at) the cutting ˈedge (of something)

(be at) the newest, most advanced stage in the development of something: working at the cutting edge of computer technology
See also: cutting, edge
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

cutting edge, at/on the

In the forefront of new developments. The analogy is to the sharp edge of a knife or other tool, which is in front during the act of cutting. The term came into use in the field of scientific and technologic research about 1950 and soon was extended to practically any area of endeavor. For example, in a radio interview on November 14, 1989, Craig Wich, the director of Opera Lab, explained that his organization’s approach to integrating movement, emotion, and singing was at the cutting edge of a new approach to opera (Boston, WCRB). A similar metaphor widely used is the leading edge. Dating from the 1870s and at first describing only the forward edge of a rudder or propeller blade that cuts the water, it was later expanded to mean any device or system that extends an aircraft’s speed, altitude, and range, and eventually transferred to the vanguard of anything—“the leading edge of technology,” for example.
See also: cutting, on
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • a cutting edge
  • at the cutting edge
  • at the cutting edge of something
  • cutting edge, at the
  • cutting edge, at/on the
  • on the cutting edge
  • cut from
  • cut (someone or something) from (something)
  • cut (something) out of (something)
  • cut out of
References in periodicals archive
At one time or another, Apple, IBM, AT&T, and a host of other technology and telecommunications companies stepped out to play a "cutting edge" leadership role, then a short time later bled profusely because of its pioneering effort.
Cutting Edge specialises in providing glass and glazing systems to the commercial construction market and reports an annual revenue of over USD10.0m.
"Ensuring sustained relevance in today's rapidly evolving Healthcare Distribution Chain requires organizations to reevaluate their value proposition and to develop proprietary device and service solutions, in order to insulate themselves from being overrun by the swarming tide of distribution disruption," commented Regina, and "our talented team at Cutting Edge is committed to helping our clients navigate these waters."
The effects of the drag finishing process parameters are investigated on the cutting edge radius.
Another advantage of the button cutter is that the round inserts allow for the use of more of the cutting edge, resulting in up to twice the material removal capability of a typical square-edged insert.
For nano-scale cutting in this system, the cutting depth can be controlled in the range of 1-100 nm (1 nm = 10-6 m) by changing the normal load applied to the cutting edge fixed on the cantilever tip.
The Pentacut's unique five cutting edge design makes it very economical.
-- International pharmaceutical companies invest an average of $43 million to implement authorized generics strategies as part of their overall lifecycle management initiatives, according to Cutting Edge Information.
So cutting edge, it can't be logged on to at a website and seen on a screen in rotating 3D images?
The relatively coarse surface irregularities that extend to the extreme edge of blades become rapidly polished until the surface area and cutting edge reaches a smooth equilibrium.
And it's direct from the Bridewell that The Cutting Edge comes - a spine-tingling anthology show of the works of a bunch of American musical theatre writers dubbed ``the Broadway bratpack''.
ALL-IN-WONDER RADEON 7500 offers the industry's only Radio Frequency (RF) remote control, cutting edge 2D and 3D graphics performance with the RADEON 7500 graphics chip, 64 MB of Double Data Rate (DDR) memory, and unparalleled ALL-IN-WONDER multimedia features.
Economic turmoil may be hurting the advertising industry, but Springfield, Massachusetts-based Cutting Edge Broadcasting Inc., is bucking the trend.