English dictionary, thesaurus, translations & etymology
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verb

belay

BEE-lay
verb
1
In climbing, to hold and control the rope so that a falling climber is caught safely.
"She belayed her partner carefully as he worked his way up the cliff face."
2
To secure a rope firmly around a fixed point such as a cleat.
"The sailors belayed the line to a cleat on the deck."
3
As a command, to stop or cancel an action already underway.
""Belay that order," the captain called out, "we're changing course.""

How to Use Belay

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishTo secure a rope so someone or something is held safe, or as a command, to stop and undo an order.

Memory tip

You will meet this word almost only in sailing and rock-climbing contexts.

Trace the full origin ↓
Common pairings
belay a rope belay a climber belay that order

Word Forms

belayed past tense, belaid past tense, Belays plural, belays plural, belays singular

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Test yourself on “belay” A quick quiz — meaning, synonyms & usage

Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

She _____ her partner carefully as he worked his way up the cliff face.

Etymology

From Old English beleccgan, "to lay around, secure" — built from be- ("around") plus lay, later specialised into rope and climbing use.

Rhymes for belay

See all rhymes for belay →
Definitions: FreeDict original editorial