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belay
[ bih-ley ]
verb (used with object)
- Nautical. to fasten (a rope) by winding around a pin or short rod inserted in a holder so that both ends of the rod are clear.
- Mountain Climbing.
- to secure (a person) by attaching to one end of a rope.
- to secure (a rope) by attaching to a person or to an object offering stable support.
- (used chiefly in the imperative)
- to cease (an action); stop.
- to ignore (an announcement, order, etc.):
Belay that, the meeting will be at 0900 instead of 0800.
verb (used without object)
- to belay a rope:
Belay on that cleat over there.
noun
- Mountain Climbing. a rock, bush, or other object sturdy enough for a running rope to be passed around it to secure a hold.
belay
/ bɪˈleɪ /
verb
- nautical to make fast (a line) by securing to a pin, cleat, or bitt
- usually imperative nautical to stop; cease
- ˈbiːˌleɪ mountaineering to secure (a climber) to a mountain by tying the rope off round a rock spike, piton, nut, etc
noun
- ˈbiːˌleɪ mountaineering the attachment (of a climber) to a mountain by tying the rope off round a rock spike, piton, nut, etc, to safeguard the party in the event of a fall See also running belay
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of belay1
Example Sentences
Like rock climbing, the sport entails a rope system — known as belaying — but differs in substantive ways.
Carrasco called down to make sure the other guide had him “on belay,” as climbers say, and someone shouted back, “No.”
“I think there’s something about climbing where you’re really trusting your life to your belay partner, your climbing partner, and that lends itself to relationships in a lot of ways,” she said.
But it adds that it is a "mess of old, rotting gear that has been left behind at each belay and accumulated over decades of use".
The former will have certified rock-climbing guides belaying climbers and teaching climbing skills throughout the day at the rock wall.
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