Определение v-bottom в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
- anti-bottom quark
- The antiquark corresponding to the bottom quark
- anti-bottom quarks
- plural form of anti-bottom quark
- artichoke bottom
- The edible fleshy receptacle at the bottom of an artichoke flower
- bell-bottom
- A style of pants in which the end of each pantleg flares out dramatically from the knee downward, like the mouth of a bell
- bell-bottom trousers
- Trousers with a wide flair towards the bottom of the legs, permitting them to be rolled-up above the knee; traditionally worn by sailors
- bet one's bottom dollar
- To be absolutely sure of something; to be certain enough of something to wager everything
He talks about it a lot, but I would bet my bottom dollar that he has never actually been there.
- bottom
- A submissive in a BDSM relationship or roleplay
- bottom
- The lowest part from the uppermost part, in either of these senses:
(Can we clean up() this sense?) The part seen, or intended to be seen, nearest the edge of the visual field normally occupied by the lowest visible objects, as footers appear at the bottoms of pages.
- bottom
- A gay man who likes take a passive sexual role rather than an active role (e.g. to be penetrated in anal sex rather than to penetrate)
- bottom
- Character, reliability, staying power, dignity, integrity or sound judgment
lack bottom.
- bottom
- The lowest or last place or position
Those files should go on the bottom shelf.
- bottom
- The second half of an inning, the home team's turn to bat
- bottom
- certain parts of a vessel, particularly the cargo hold or the portion of the ship that is always underwater
- bottom
- A bottom quark
- bottom
- a cargo vessel, a ship
- bottom
- The buttocks or anus
- bottom
- To fall to the lowest point
The Dow Jones Industrial Average bottomed on September 24, 2001. The CRB Index bottomed on October 24.
- bottom
- To establish firmly; to found or justify on or upon something; to set on a firm footing; to set or rest on or upon something which provides support or authority
Moreover, the Supreme Court has held that the President must obey outstanding executive orders, even when bottomed on the Constitution, until they are revoked.
- bottom
- a valley, often used in place names
Where shall we go for a walk? How about Ashcombe Bottom?.
- bottom
- To be the submissive in a BDSM relationship or roleplay
- bottom antiquark
- The antiparticle of the bottom quark
- bottom burp
- Flatulence
- bottom burps
- plural form of bottom burp
- bottom edge
- A deflection of a ball off of the bottom edge of a bat, onto the ground and potentially into the wicket
- bottom edge
- To hit the ball with the bottom edge of the bat
- bottom edge
- The edge of a bat closest to the ground
- bottom edged
- Simple past tense and past participle of bottom edge
- bottom edges
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bottom edge
- bottom edges
- plural form of bottom edge
- bottom edging
- Present participle of bottom edge
- bottom feeder
- A person who dwells amidst or thrives off of the unwholesome things in a society
- bottom feeder
- A fish or other aquatic creature who feeds off the bottom of their habitat; a flatfish
- bottom feeders
- plural form of bottom feeder
- bottom feeding
- which dwells amidst, or thrives off of, the unwholesome things in society
- bottom feeding
- which feeds off the bottom of its habitat
- bottom fermentation
- A slow alcoholic fermentation process carried out at low temperatures during which the yeast sinks to the bottom of the liquid. Used in brewing lager-type beers
- bottom gear
- The lowest gearing available from a gearbox, typically in a motor vehicle or cycle
- bottom gears
- The lower two or three gears (depending on total ratios available) of a gearbox, typically in a motor vehicle or cycle
- bottom hand
- With a standard batting grip, the hand placed further down the handle of the bat; the batsman's dominant hand, providing most power to a shot
- bottom hands
- plural form of bottom hand
- bottom kill
- a method of closing an oil well, by drilling a relief well to the bottom of the borehole of the blown-out well, and pumping in heavy drilling fluid (synthetic mud) to counteract oil pressure and staunch the flow, then filling in the orifice to the oil reservoir with concrete (cement) sealing the blow-out and the relief wells
- bottom line
- The final balance; the amount of money or profit left after everything has been tallied
- bottom line
- The summary or result; the most important information; the upshot; the net-net
The bottom line is that there simply are not enough hours in the day to finish all there is to do.
- bottom liner
- A person who is most concerned with the bottom line
- bottom liners
- plural form of bottom liner
- bottom lines
- plural form of bottom line
- bottom of the harbour
- A tax avoidance scheme from the 1970s
1982: The 'bottom of the harbour' scheme was so named because a company once stripped of its assets, was dumped and, like a body in a cement suit, sank never to be seen again. — Sydney Morning Herald, 5 June 1982, page 13. Quoted in G. A. Wilkes, A Dictionary of Australian Colloquialisms, second edition, 1985, Sydney University Press, ISBN 0-424-00113-6.
- bottom of the line
- The worst, the most lackluster, or lowest quality currently on the market, especially among selections in a product line
- bottom of the ninth
- By extension, any last chance or final opportunity
- bottom of the ninth
- In baseball, the second part of the ninth and final inning. The end of the game
Hitting a home_run with the bases_loaded in the bottom of the ninth let the home team finish ahead of the visitors.
- bottom order
- The batsmen, constituting the tail, who bat last - roughly in positions 8 to 11
- bottom order
- Of a batsman who bats in the bottom order
- bottom out
- to reach the bottom, to reach the nadir or low point
- bottom quark
- A quark having a fractional electric charge of -1/3 and a mass about 4,100 to 4,400 MeV. Symbol: b
- bottom quarks
- plural form of bottom quark
- bottom sheet
- A bed sheet used to cover a mattress, i.e. the sheet that one typically lies on
- bottom the house
- To clean a house from top to bottom; to clean a house extremely thoroughly
- bottom-most
- Lowest. Closest to the bottom
- bottom-up
- of, or relating to a hierarchical system that progresses from multiple, small subunits to a single, large basic unit
- from the bottom of one's heart
- In earnest; sincerely; with one's full feeling
He told her how much he loved her, and he meant it from the bottom of his heart.
- front bottom
- the female genitalia
- get to the bottom of
- To understand, discover the truth about, or solve
I don't know what's going on here, but I'll get to the bottom of it sooner or later.
- race to the bottom
- A situation in which competition between governments leads to very excessive (harmful) deregulation
- rock bottom
- The very lowest possible level
Pork belly futures have hit rock bottom.
- rock-bottom
- Alternative spelling of rock bottom
She knew in her heart, she had hit rock-bottom this time.
- rock-bottom
- to fall to the lowest possible level
By now, you probably think your opinion of Goldman Sachs and its swarm of Wall Street allies has rock-bottomed at raw loathing.
- saggar maker's bottom knocker
- A young boy employed to make the base of a saggar from a lump of fireclay, knocking it into a metal ring with a wooden mallet
- saggar maker's bottom knockers
- plural form of saggar maker's bottom knocker
- scrape the bottom of the barrel
- To use the least desirable parts of something
They must really have been scraping the bottom of the barrel if they couldn't find a better design than that.
- smooth as a baby's bottom
- Extremely smooth
- soft as a baby's bottom
- extremely soft (not rough)
- sulfur-bottom
- the blue whale
- sulfur-bottom whale
- the blue whale
- sulphur bottom whale
- the blue whale
- sulphur-bottom whale
- Alternative spelling of sulfur-bottom whale
- bottom-up
- Progressing from small or subordinate units to a larger or more important unit, as in an organization
- bottom
- a cargo ship; "they did much of their overseas trade in foreign bottoms" the lower side of anything the lowest part of anything; "they started at the bottom of the hill" the second half of an inning; while the home team is at bat strike the ground, as with a ship's bottom provide with a bottom or a seat; "bottom the chairs" the lowest rank; "bottom member of the class" at the bottom; lowest or last; "the bottom price
- bottom
- {n} the lowest part, a foundation, a valley, ball, ship, dregs
- bottom
- {v} to put a bottom, to rest or fix upon
- bottom line
- 1. the final total of an account or balance sheet. 2. the fundamental and deciding factor
- bottom rail on top
- (deyim) When one formerly in a position of weakness or subservience gains power or dominance over his former oppressor. Originally referred to the idea of black slaves gaining power over their ex-owners in the wake of the US Civil War
A freed black slave in the Union Army saw his ex-owner being led away in chains as a prisoner and said to him, Hello massa, bottom rail on top this time..
- bottom-dweller
- An insult which indicates that the recipient is a member of society's lowest levels.A fish that lives and feeds on the bottom of a body of water; a scavenger that feeds low on the food chain; a bottom-feeder such as carp and catfish.A person of low character, having no scruples; a selfish, conniving and amoral person; a scumbag
- bottom-dwelling
- Of or relating to fish and marine life that dwell on the bottom of a body of water
- from the bottom of one's heart
- with great feeling
My sister thanked the man from the bottom of her heart for saving her dog's life.
- from the bottom of one's heart
- sincerely
- get the bottom of
- (deyim) To find out the real cause of
1. The superintendent talked with several students to get to the bottom of the trouble.
2. The doctor made several tests to get to the bottom of the man's headaches.