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  2. Dictionary

    base
    [bās]
    noun
    base (noun) · bases (plural noun)
    1. the lowest part or edge of something, especially the part on which it rests or is supported:
      "she sat down at the base of a tree"
      Opposite:
      • architecture
        the part of a column between the shaft and pedestal or pavement.
      • botany
        zoology
        the end at which a part or organ is attached to the trunk or main part:
        "a shoot is produced at the base of the stem"
      • geometry
        a line or surface on which a figure is regarded as standing:
        "the base of the triangle"
      • surveying
        a line of known length used in triangulation.
      • heraldry
        the lowest part of a shield.
    2. a conceptual structure or entity on which something draws or depends:
      "the town's economic base collapsed"
    3. a place used as a center of operations by the armed forces or others; a headquarters:
      "the corporal headed back to base" · "a base for shipping operations"
      • the main place where a person works or stays:
        "she makes the studio her base"
    4. a main or important element or ingredient to which other things are added:
      "soaps with a vegetable oil base"
      • a substance such as water or oil into which a pigment is mixed to form paint.
      • a substance used as a foundation for makeup:
        "her makeup artist works with base, eye makeup, and lipstick"
    5. chemistry
      a substance capable of reacting with an acid to form a salt and water, or (more broadly) of accepting or neutralizing hydrogen ions. Compare with alkali
      • biochemistry
        a purine or pyrimidine group in a nucleotide or nucleic acid.
    6. electronics
      the middle part of a bipolar transistor, separating the emitter from the collector.
    7. linguistics
      the root or stem of a word or a derivative.
      • the uninflected form of a verb.
    8. mathematics
      a number used as the basis of a numeration scale.
      • a number in terms of which other numbers are expressed as logarithms.
    9. baseball
      one of the four stations that must be reached in turn to score a run.
      • informal
        used to refer to progressive levels of sexual intimacy:
        "she and her boyfriend got to second base"
    verb
    base (verb) · bases (third person present) · based (past tense) · based (past participle) · basing (present participle) · -based (adjective)
    1. have as the foundation for (something); use as a point from which (something) can develop:
      "the film is based on a novel by Pat Conroy" · "inaccurate conclusions based on incomplete facts"
      Similar:
      use as a basis
      emanate from
      derive from
      spring from
      stem from
      originate in
      have its origin in
      can be traced back to
    2. situate as the center of operations:
      "a London-based band" · "a research program based at the University of Arizona"
    Origin
    Middle English: from Old French, from Latin basis ‘base, pedestal’, from Greek.
    base
    [bās]
    adjective
    base (adjective) · baser (comparative adjective) · basest (superlative adjective)
    1. archaic
      denoting or befitting a person of low social class.
    2. (of coins or other articles) not made of precious metal:
      "the basest coins in the purse were made in the seventh century AD"
    Origin
    late Middle English: from Old French bas, from medieval Latin bassus ‘short’ (found in classical Latin as a cognomen). Early senses included ‘low, short’ and ‘of inferior quality’; from the latter arose a sense ‘low in the social scale’, and hence (mid 16th century) ‘reprehensibly cowardly, selfish, or mean’.
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