0 present 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:
There is an excellent discussion on 'belting' and some useful guidelines on the common postural problems.
Devices like the hopper boy, conveyors, lifts, and leather belting reappeared as parts of a more general mass production over the following century.
No less than 3,500 miles of conveyor belting is used daily in our mines, and that, together with brattice cloth, represents a serious fire hazard.
The production of conveyor belting has not been brought to a standstill or appreciably reduced.
It would be a hard, not a soft belting.
Substitutes are put into belting and into cables, and all these savings will be cumulative.
With the encouragement of local authorities, teachers in some schools have stopped belting altogether and have introduced a variety of other sanctions.
Let me content myself by giving one example, that of conveyer belting, which we have heard something about recently.