cleat
Americannoun
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a wedge-shaped block fastened to a surface to serve as a check or support.
He nailed cleats into the sides of the bookcase to keep the supports from slipping.
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a strip of metal, wood, or the like, fastened across a surface, as a ramp or gangway, to provide sure footing or to maintain an object in place.
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a strip of wood, metal, etc., fastened across a surface, as of a plank or series of adjacent planks, for strength or support.
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a conical or rectangular projection, usually of hard rubber, or a metal strip with sharp projections, built into or attached to the sole of a shoe to provide greater traction.
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a shoe fitted with such projections.
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a metal plate fastened to the sole or heel of a shoe, to protect against wear.
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Shipbuilding. a hook-shaped piece of metal supporting a small structural member.
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Also called belaying cleat. Nautical. an object of wood or metal having one or two projecting horns to which ropes may be belayed, especially as fixed to the deck, bulkhead, or stanchion of a vessel.
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the cleavage plane of coal as found in a mine.
verb (used with object)
noun
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a wedge-shaped block, usually of wood, attached to a structure to act as a support
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a device consisting of two hornlike prongs projecting horizontally in opposite directions from a central base, used for securing lines on vessels, wharves, etc
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a short length of angle iron used as a bracket
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a piece of metal, leather, etc, attached to the sole of a shoe to prevent wear or slipping
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a small triangular-shaped nail used in glazing
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any of the main cleavage planes in a coal seam
verb
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to supply or support with a cleat or cleats
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to secure (a line) on a cleat
Etymology
Origin of cleat
1350–1400; Middle English clete wedge, cognate with Old High German klōz lump, ball, Dutch kloot; akin to clot
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
“They were the first thing I considered to be a luxury, because I didn’t actually need that model of cleat to play soccer, but they were the ones I desired and wanted,” he continues.
From Los Angeles Times • Oct. 21, 2024
“So we do try to get them to use a cleat that has a favorable interaction with the turf.”
From Seattle Times • Oct. 9, 2023
The collection included tailored pieces such as trousers, a suit jacket and a trench coat featuring the Nike swoosh, along with a slip-on mule resembling a football cleat.
From Reuters • Aug. 15, 2023
Dodgers: RHP Yency Almonte said he caught his cleat in a hole on the mound, hyperextending his right knee with two outs in the ninth.
From Washington Times • Aug. 12, 2023
I remember Coach M telling them to put me in the cart and drive me down the hill to the doctor’s, and I saw JP standing in front of me, holding the cleat I’d thrown.
From "Winger" by Andrew Smith
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.