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| 1. | the lowest or deepest part of anything, as distinguished from the top: the bottom of a hill; the bottom of a page. |
| 2. | the under or lower side; underside: the bottom of a typewriter. |
| 3. | the ground under any body of water: the bottom of the sea. |
| 4. | Usually, bottoms. Also called bottom land. Physical Geography. low alluvial land next to a river. |
| 5. | Nautical.
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| 6. | the seat of a chair. |
| 7. | Informal. the buttocks; rump. |
| 8. | the fundamental part; basic aspect. |
| 9. | bottoms, (used with a plural verb ) the trousers of a pair of pajamas. |
| 10. | the working part of a plow, comprising the plowshare, landside, and moldboard. |
| 11. | the cause; origin; basis: Try getting to the bottom of the problem. |
| 12. | Baseball.
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| 13. | lowest limit, esp. of dignity, status, or rank: When people sink that low, they're bound to reach the bottom soon. |
| 14. | Usually, bottoms. Chemistry. the heaviest, least volatile fraction of petroleum, left behind in distillation after more volatile fractions are driven off. |
| 15. | to furnish with a bottom. |
| 16. | to base or found (usually fol. by on or upon). |
| 17. | to discover the full meaning of (something); fathom. |
| 18. | to bring (a submarine) to rest on the ocean floor: They had to bottom the sub until the enemy cruisers had passed by. |
| 19. | to be based; rest. |
| 20. | to strike against the bottom or end; reach the bottom. |
| 21. | (of an automotive vehicle) to sink vertically, as when bouncing after passing over a bump, so that the suspension reaches the lower limit of its motion: The car bottomed too easily on the bumpy road. |
| 22. | of or pertaining to the bottom or a bottom. |
| 23. | located on or at the bottom: I want the bottom book in the stack. |
| 24. | lowest: bottom prices. |
| 25. | living near or on the bottom: A flounder is a bottom fish. |
| 26. | fundamental: the bottom cause. |
| 27. | bottom out, to reach the lowest state or level: The declining securities market finally bottomed out and began to rise. |
| 28. | at bottom, in reality; fundamentally: They knew at bottom that they were only deceiving themselves. Also, at the bottom. |
| 29. | bet one's bottom dollar,
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| 30. | bottoms up, (used interjectionally to urge the downing of one's drink). |
n, Skt budhná
bottom
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bottom