bottoming
Appearance
English
[edit]Verb
[edit]bottoming
- present participle and gerund of bottom
Noun
[edit]bottoming (plural bottomings)
- 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.
- 1961, The Shock and Vibration Bulletin (issue 29, part 4, page 159)
- A foundation (literal and figurative senses).
- 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
- 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.
- (dyeing) A substance used to prepare a material for dyeing.
- 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.
- (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.
- (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.