Belting vs Falsetto - What's the difference?
belting | falsetto |
A beating with a belt.
(figuratively) A thorough defeat; a thrashing.
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=August 24, author=Matt Johnston, title=Race for the eight as AFL finals approach, work=Herald Sun
, passage=He said recent nail-biting finals had renewed interest in the end-of-season contests, after a series of one-sided beltings earlier this decade. }}
A system of beltwork, as in a conveyor or other mechanical device.
The material from which belts for machinery are made.
(Northern English dialect) very good; exceptional (can also be used adverbially)
(countable or uncountable) The "false" (singing) voice in any human, usually airy and lacking a purity of vowels; created by utilizing the next highest vocal folds above those used for speech and normal range singing. It is commonly confused with the Head Voice register.
As nouns the difference between belting and falsetto
is that belting is a beating with a belt while falsetto is (countable or uncountable) The "false" (singing) voice in any human, usually airy and lacking a purity of vowels; created by utilizing the next highest vocal folds above those used for speech and normal range singing. It is commonly confused with the Head Voice register.As a verb belting
is present participle of lang=en.As an adjective belting
is very good; exceptional can also be used adverbially.belting
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)citation
Adjective
(-)- You'll have a belting time!
- She cooks belting good food.