bellyload

English

Alternative forms

  • belly-load

Etymology

belly + load

Noun

bellyload (plural bellyloads)

  1. (colloquial) The amount that will fit in one's belly.
  2. (colloquial) The amount or number that will fit inside an aircraft.
    • 1980, Samuel Fuller, The Big Red One, New York: Bantam, Chapter 23, p. 79,
      The plane was in labor carrying a belly-load of bombs.
    • 1992, Melvyn Bragg, Crystal Rooms, London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1993, Chapter Twenty-Two, p. 289,
      [] there on the plane, a belly-load of decent people soaring above serene tooth-drawn Windsor Castle, home of the emblem of so much savagery []
    • 1998, Helen Dunmore, Your Blue-Eyed Boy, Boston: Little Brown, Chapter 10, p. 103,
      You were lifted out of your lives, disgorged in bellyloads by planes that lumbered in looking too heavy to fly.
  3. (colloquial) A large amount or number (of something).
    • 1993, Joan Lingard, After Colette, London: Sinclair-Stevenson, Chapter Four, p. 85,
      She caused a bellyload of trouble []
    • 1999, Gary Garrison, The Playwright’s Survival Guide, Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann, Part 1, p. 24,
      [] you don’t make a bellyload of excuses for why you haven’t written more, better, faster, or funnier.

See also

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