cut capers



cut capers

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."
See also: caper, cut

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Fenella-Scottish
LyovLYOFRussian
TrevTREV (English)Welsh, English
Gurmeet-Indian (Sikh)
Sylviane-French
Darcy['dɑ:si]