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"belted up" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is usually used when referring to having tightened a belt around oneself. Example Sentence: She belted up her robe before taking a walk in the cool evening air.
Dictionary
belted up
verb
Past of belt up
Exact(8)
After that, I want all passengers and cabin crew to be belted up and no-one is to walk around for any reason.
Plus, the fact that the plot was safely belted up in the rear seat let us focus on the real drivers.
This rich 'merlot' coloured pair by Steven Alan look extremely elegant in reality, and when belted up over a silk blouse are far more bohemian beauty than faded rocker.
Torygraph readers who obeyed the reviewer's concluding injunction to "strap in" for a "thrilling joyride" will have spent a frustrating month and more waiting belted up in their figurative 4x4s with the motor running.
So to find them belting out their own hits, while belted up and stuck in traffic beside some affably laddy bloke from England, is a special kind of delicious.
And Ann Demeulemeester's lovely collection of textured black suits, some with touches of inky pony skin, were strangely marred by tricky poet blouses and leather corsets that belted up the back with as many as 13 buckles.
Similar(52)
As trends go, belting up is pretty easy to get onboard with.
Today, belting up for a journey is as much part of driving a car as starting the engine.
"Really?" I'm buckled-up, belted, zipped-up, and flaccid.
R: "So you want to give all the belts up?
"Belt up, Sir Steve!" wrote The Guardian in an editorial.
More suggestions(6)
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com