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bottoming

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Verb

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bottoming

  1. present participle and gerund of bottom

Noun

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bottoming (plural bottomings)

  1. The act of something that bottoms; the point at which something bottoms (in various senses).
    • 1961, The Shock and Vibration Bulletin (issue 29, part 4, page 159)
      In the course of this investigation, it was learned that the mean number of bottomings per second could be calculated theoretically []
    • 1961, Clay Fisher, The Apache Kid[1], page 135:
      A hundred and fifty yards from its bottoming, the cliff trail squeezed between a pair of portal rocks.
    • 1990, Judith Headington McGee and Jerrold Dickson, J.K. Lasser’s Personal Investment Planner[2], page 263:
      Many analysts point to the slowing building rate for new office space as evidence of a bottoming of the commercial real estate market.
  2. A foundation (literal and figurative senses).
    • 1642, John Ball, An Answer to Two Treatises of Mr. John Can[3], page 44:
      These and the like are the maine truths in your esteeme, which I conceive have no bottoming in the holy Scripture.
    • 1851, Henry Mayhew, London Labour and the London Poor[4], volume 2, page 184:
      a road made with six inches of broken stone of great hardness, laid either on a foundation of large stones, set in the form of a pavement, or upon a bottoming of concrete
    • 1911, John Ward, The Roman Era in Britain[5], page 48:
      [The ramparts of] Rough Castle and Bar Hill [] like that of Birrens, rest upon stone bottomings. The Antonine Wall is of the same construction, only on a larger scale.
    • 1999, Philip Weinberg, editor, The Supreme Court: Selections from the Four-Volume Encyclopedia of the American Constitution and Supplement[6], pages 345-346:
      One cannot take a Holmes precedent and spin out the resolution of companion cases; one cannot go to Holmes to find the substantive bottomings of an area of law
  3. Material used to line the bottom of something.
    • 1885, W. Shepherd, Prairie Experiences in Handling Cattle and Sheep[7], page 85:
      [] we were overtaken by a storm, and camped ten miles short of the ranch; we could afford to do this, as his wagon had a good tilt and a bottoming of straw.
    • 1984, Robert J. McDonald, Basic Upholstery Repair and Restoration[8], page 114:
      A bottoming of linen or hessian covering can be omitted if the outside covering is folded under whilst being tacked on the underside of the base members.
  4. (dyeing) A substance used to prepare a material for dyeing.
    • 1875, James Napier, A Manual of Dyeing and Dyeing Receipts[9], page 220:
      Sumach is generally used as a bottoming when the metallic base or mordant is iron or tin, and for dyeing deep colours, such as blacks, reds, &c.
    • 1917, The Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry[10], volume 36, page 594:
      For white-haired calf’s-skin a bottoming of walnut or gallnut extract is used.
  5. Residue left at the bottom of something.
    • 1899, S. R. Crockett, Kit Kennedy: Country Boy[11], page 218:
      [His porridge] was, as usual, composed of the scraps and bottomings of bowls which had been left unfinished by the rest of the household.
    • 1977, Mervin F. Roberts, Guinea Pigs[12], page 14:
      [] the cage bottomings make a fine addition to the mulch pile.
  6. (technical, historical) The contouring of the wooden seat of a chair.
    • 1986, Stephen Pheasant and Christine M. Haslegrave, Bodyspace: Anthropometry, Ergonomics, and the Design of Work[13], page 80:
      A critical feature seems to be the subtle contouring of the seat known as its ‘bottoming’. This was hand carved []
    • 1993, The Buyer’s Guide to British Furniture Craftsmen[14], page 90:
      The sculpting, or bottoming of the seat should be well defined and quite deep, with smooth, boldly cut contours, to a certain extent mirroring the form it is intended to support.
  7. (UK, colloquial) The act of thoroughly cleaning something.
    • 1970, Kathleen Eyre, Fylde Folk, Moss or Sand[15], page 55:
      Mag gave [the office] a “bottoming” once a week with carbolic soap and disinfectant []
    • 1974, Miss Read, Farther Afield[16], pages 45-46:
      ‘And I’ll give the place a proper bottoming, cupboards and all, before you’re back,’ said Mrs Pringle, in a tone which sounded more like a threat than a promise.