alot of kids are kill or badly injured because of careless driving
That depends on how old of a child. If the child is in a car seat or booster seat, then no. Studies and actual accidents have shown that children and infants can be beheaded in the front seat if airbags deploy. The child needs to be buckled in the back seat, center if possible.
The well dressed Virginia settler man wore breeches, stockings and buckled shoes. Depending on their class, many wore wigs. The women wore long dresses, corsets, and polished buckled shoes. The children were just miniature versions of the adults.
The opposite of buckled (strapped in, or bent) would be "unbuckled."The word buckled as in bent or deformed could have the opposites "straight" or "unbent."
fastened
Because they are buckled in and unless something goes wrong and the buckle becomes loose, your good to go!
Yes, as long as their car seat base is buckled in the correct manner shown in the car seat directions and their facing the right way.
A saddled horse
Kinda-sorta. I haven't buckled one in years, but downhillers and people trying to get their bikes as light as possible do it quite regularly.
YES, three will fit. If they are true carseats and not boosters it will work great. If any of them are boosters, it will be a tight fit to get them buckled each time as there is very little room to get a hand into the buckle area. In case anyone is wondering, you can also fit 3 carseats or boosters comfortably in the middle row of an 8 passenger Yukon, Yukon XL, Tahoe and Suburban as well as the backseat of a Chevy silverado or z71 (and the GMC equivalant) Crewcab. I have also fit 3 in the backseat of a Caddy Sedan Deville-fits the same as an Impala, a 1994 and 1998 Poniac GranPrix and 1999 Ford Explorer had to really squeeze them in, but they fit. I hope that helps!
That mechanical part submitted to a buckling has broken.
boucléNote that the word can also mean "buckled".
Yes