Beltway
See also: beltway
English
Proper noun
Beltway
- A 64-mile Interstate freeway surrounding Washington, D.C..
- (mostly local usage) The expressway that surrounds another city.
- (US, politics) The US federal government and policy and lobbying organizations, located in Washington, D.C..
Derived terms
- Beltway bandit
- inside-the-Beltway
- inside the Beltway
- outside the Beltway
Adjective
Beltway (comparative more Beltway, superlative most Beltway)
- Of or relating to the culture of Washington, D.C.; politicized.
- 1993 January 6, Mark Feeney, “Impeach me tender”, in Boston Globe, page 28:
- Apparently wishing to go Beltway in a big way, the Gap reportedly solicited Clinton spokesman George Stephanopoulos and media adviser Mandy Grunwald to pose for ads, but were turned down.
- 1997, Kurt Finsterbusch, Annual Editions: Sociology, 97-98:
- In a typical indictment, one columnist recently called some piece of Washington policymaking "too secret, too expert, too Beltway."
- 2002
- Your New Yorker article posed the question, "Can the president's education crusade survive Beltway politics?"
- 2003 September 21, Howard Fineman, “Dean: Not Just A New-School Kinda Guy”, in Newsweek:
- And wouldn't you know, the real-life Dean, in a real-life debate, used a line the show's writers had proposed for him. Nothing more Beltway than that.
- 2003 July 8, “Unabomber Manifesto - an excerpt”, in sci.astro, Usenet:
- Then he went Beltway and started rooting for the Orioles.
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