0 a small, pointed part on the bottom of some shoes used for particular sports or activities to stop you from sliding
1 one of the small, hard pieces on the bottom of special shoes worn in some sports because they catch in the ground and keep you from falling
The team members must buy their own cleats but not their jerseys.
It makes it cleat that any confidential information obtained by any one of a number of primary recipients must be kept confidential.
It cleats with a matter which has attracted a good deal more attention.
It is cleat that, however long they last, our oil and coal resources are dependent on vegetable matter which is expendable.
One would imagine that we had come out of the crisis of 1957 all cleat: but is that so?
I am not immediately cleat about whether the clause is referring to one scheme for the whole of industry or one for each industry.
Few hardware shops stock the plastic moulding and the cleats because there is virtually no profit in it for them.
It is quite cleat to anyone who really studies the report that there must have been overheads incurred in this charter flying.