BASE


Meaning of BASE in English

1. n. & v.

--n.

1. a a part that supports from beneath or serves as a foundation for an object or structure. b a notional structure or entity on which something draws or depends (power base).

2 a principle or starting-point; a basis.

3 esp. Mil. a place from which an operation or activity is directed.

4 a a main or important ingredient of a mixture. b a substance, e.g. water, in combination with which pigment forms paint etc.

5 a substance used as a foundation for make-up.

6 Chem. a substance capable of combining with an acid to form a salt and water and usu. producing hydroxide ions when dissolved in water.

7 Math. a number in terms of which other numbers or logarithms are expressed (see RADIX).

8 Archit. the part of a column between the shaft and pedestal or pavement.

9 Geom. a line or surface on which a figure is regarded as standing.

10 Surveying a known line used as a geometrical base for trigonometry.

11 Electronics the middle part of a transistor separating the emitter from the collector.

12 Linguistics a root or stem as the origin of a word or a derivative.

13 Baseball etc. one of the four stations that must be reached in turn when scoring a run.

14 Bot. & Zool. the end at which an organ is attached to the trunk.

15 Heraldry the lowest part of a shield.

--v.tr.

1. (usu. foll. by on, upon) found or establish (a theory based on speculation; his opinion was soundly based).

2 (foll. by at, in, etc.) station (troops were based in Malta).

Phrases and idioms:

base hospital esp. Austral. a hospital in a rural area, or (in warfare) removed from the field of action. base pairing Biochem. complementary binding by means of hydrogen bonds of a purine to a pyrimidine base in opposite strands of nucleic acids. base rate Brit. the interest rate set by the Bank of England, used as the basis for other banks' rates. base unit a unit that is defined arbitrarily and not by combinations of other units.

Etymology: F base or L basis stepping f. Gk 2. adj.1 lacking moral worth; cowardly, despicable.

2 menial.

3 not pure; alloyed (base coin).

4 (of a metal) low in value (opp. NOBLE, PRECIOUS).

Derivatives:

basely adv. baseness n.

Etymology: ME in sense 'of small height', f. F bas f. med.L bassus short (in L as a cognomen)

Oxford English vocab.      Оксфордский английский словарь.