The lower fuselage of an airplane.
The stomach.
The main curved portion of a knife blade.
The abdomen, especially a fat one.
The part of anything which resembles (either closely or abstractly) the human belly in protuberance or in concavity; often, the fundus (innermost part).
The womb.
The hollow part of a curved or bent timber, the convex part of which is the back.
To swell and become protuberant; to bulge or billow.
To cause to swell out; to fill.
To position one’s belly; to move on one’s belly.
An aerobatic maneuver in which an aircraft flies a circular path in a vertical plane.
A complete circuit for an electric current.
A quasigroup with an identity element.
A ring road or beltway.
The opening so formed.
A loop-shaped intrauterine device.
A small, narrow opening; a loophole.
A flexible region in a protein's secondary structure.
A place at a terminus where trains or trams can turn round and go back the other way without having to reverse; a balloon loop, turning loop, or reversing loop.
An endless strip of tape or film allowing continuous repetition.
A length of thread, line or rope that is doubled over to make an opening.
An edge that begins and ends on the same vertex.
A shape produced by a curve that bends around and crosses itself.
A programmed sequence of instructions that is repeated until or while a particular condition is satisfied.
A path that starts and ends at the same point.
A bus or rail route, walking route, etc. that starts and ends at the same point.
To move in a loop.
To move something in a loop.
To place in a loop.
To join electrical components to complete a circuit.
To fly an aircraft in a loop.
To duplicate the route of a pipeline.
To form something into a loop.
To create an error in a computer program so that it runs in an endless loop and the computer freezes up.
To fasten or encircle something with a loop.
To form a loop.