0 past simple and past participle of belt
1 (especially of a vehicle) to travel with great speed:
2 to hit someone or something hard, especially with violence:
He belted him in the face.
3 to tie something with a belt:
These were securely belted on to the end of the brass tube.
Correlation between thoracic lesions and force values measured at the shoulder of 92 belted occupants involved in real accidents.
The unweighted sample includes only belted drivers, including 889 drivers aged between 17-39 years (young drivers), 515 aged 40-64 years (middleaged), and 137 aged 65-84 years (older).
Scottish local government is in the position of a school pupil being unjustly belted by a series of head teachers.
Thus, for every mile travelled belted, about two miles are travelled unbelted.
I was belted at school and well remember the experience.
How many times do we see ambulance men belted up?
One might just as well argue that the pilot of a plane would feel rather hurt if all the passengers on his plane belted up.