From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishhaircuthair‧cut /ˈheəkʌt $ ˈher-/ ●●○ noun [countable] 1 DCBwhen you have a haircut, someone cuts your hair for youhave/get a haircut I haven’t had a haircut for months!2 DCBthe style your hair is cut in Do you like my new haircut?3 → take a haircut
Examples from the Corpus
haircut• Sheffield comes for an $ 8 haircut and conversation.• It's ages since I had a haircut.• Isn't it about time you had a haircut?• They've got asymmetrical haircuts, wire-rimmed specs, an earring or two.• He wore a wig one time, too, like a Beatles haircut.• He had a punk haircut and used his right knee to drive down the middle of the road.• He has a trendy haircut and wears a dangling earring, but his accent is like his father's.have/get a haircut• Afterwards you stand no hope of getting back into the City. Get a haircut.• He got haircuts and did other errands during weekday lunch hours.• Elsewhere, Nigel Lythgoe got a haircut.• There was nothing more that he could do, so he drove into Benghazi to get a haircut.• As the ultimate luxury, hairdressers Molton Brown have created a men-only salon for boys to get a haircut in peace!• Heaven knows you all but need proof of insurance these days to get a haircut.• I was planning to finish work early today, get a haircut and maybe do some shopping.• First day home he would get a haircut and a shave.From Longman Business Dictionaryhaircuthair‧cut /ˈheəkʌtˈher-/ noun [countable] American EnglishFINANCE1a small amount off the normal selling price of a bond, share etcCongress forced depositors to take a mandatory 10 to 15% haircut in order to regulate the industry.2a reduction in the budget for a plan, investment etcBy year end, the project had been given three haircuts, and the managers began to worry about its final outcome.