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Saved by uncleflo on November 1st, 2018.
1) Mechanical - How is the film assembled?
a) Straight Cut: This is your basic cut. It's literally putting two clips side by side.
b) The Split Edit:
i) J-Cut: As you watch the first clip play, you begin to hear the audio from the next clip before you see its visuals.
ii) L-Cut: It's a J-cut in reverse. You're transitioning with Shot A's audio. This is used with dialogue scenes.
c) Jump Cut:  Cut bits and pieces out of it, and put the fragments you want to include in your timeline back together. It'll look like the clip is "jumping" around through time.
d) Cutting on Action: To put it simply, "Cutting on Action" just means cutting in the middle of your subject's action.
2) Narrative - What does the cut say?
a) Match Cut: It matches the similar actions and content of both shots.
b) Contast Cut: Drawing a connection between two things. An example being cutting from a crown of shoppers to a herd of sheep.
c) Cross-Cutting: Also known as parallel editing, it is editing two different stories so they play side-by-side.
d) Cutaways: Also called an Insert Edit. These kinds of cuts are helpful if you want to add shots that give more information and context to a scene.
e) Montage: You know what montages are, right? The subject is all over the place and different cats, to show he did a lot of work for something specific.
f) The Transition: Any kind of mixing effect that merges clips together, like a fade or dissolve. 
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