m]
| 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
The lowest point or price reached by a financial security, commodity, index or economic cycle in a given time period, which is followed by a steady increase.
Investopedia Commentary
If a stock has "bottomed out" it means it has reached its low point and is now in the early stages of an upward trend.
The bottom is the lowest level of support when charting a stock, commodity, index or economic cycle.
Related Links
An Option Strategy for Trading Market Bottoms
Market Reversals And How To Spot Them
Capitulation Defined
See also: Bear Market, Bottom Fisher, Capitulation, Flight to Quality, In the Penalty Box, Panic Selling, Recession
bottom
In addition to the idioms beginning with bottom, also see at bottom; from head to toe (top to bottom); from the bottom of one's heart; get to the bottom; hit (touch) bottom; knock the bottom out of; rock bottom; touch bottom; you bet your ass (bottom dollar).