: a number (such as 5 in 56.44 or 57) that is raised to a power (see powerentry 1 sense 5a)
especially: the number that when raised to a power equal to the logarithm of a number yields the number itself
The logarithm of 100 to the base 10 is 2 since 102 = 100.
(2)
: a number equal to the number of units in a given digit's place (see placeentry 1 sense 8) that for a given system of writing numbers is required to give the numeral 1 in the next higher place
The decimal system uses a base of 10.
also: such a system of writing numbers using an indicated base
Convert from base 10 to base 2.
(3)
: a number that is multiplied by a rate or of which a percentage or fraction is calculated
To find the interest on $90 at 10 percent multiply the base 90 by .10.
5
a
: any one of the four stations at the corners of a baseball or softball infield
allowing the batter to reach base
b
in various games: the starting place or goal
c
: a point to be considered
His opening remarks touched every base.
6
chemistry
a
: any of various typically water-soluble and bitter-tasting compounds that in solution have a pH greater than 7, are capable of reacting with an acid to form a salt, turn litmus blue, and are molecules or ions able to take up a proton from an acid or able to give up an unshared pair of electrons to an acid
Baking soda is a common household base.
b
: any of the five purine or pyrimidine bases of DNA and RNA that include cytosine, guanine, adenine, thymine, and uracil
7
finance: a price level at which a security (see securitysense 3) previously declining in price resists further decline
: an electrode that modulates the current flowing through a bipolar junction transistor according to the voltage applied to the electrode
This gate, which is called a grid in a tube and a base in a transistor, enables a small "controlling" voltage to turn on and off a much larger voltage between the cathode and the anode.—Thom Hartmann
This situation is frequently encountered by seaplane pilots in northern Canada who must fly over lakes and tundra to a base camp located on a river.—Alan Lopez
2
: of the simplest or most basic design or form : having the form of something before upgrades or customization
This GTO's 350-hp, 5.7-liter V8 is the same that's used in the base Corvette, and it produces the power and throaty exhaust sound of a classic muscle car.—Consumer Reports
base, low, vile mean deserving of contempt because of the absence of higher values.
base stresses the ignoble and may suggest cruelty, treachery, greed, or grossness.
base motives
low may connote crafty cunning, vulgarity, or immorality and regularly implies an outraging of one's sense of decency or propriety.
refused to listen to such low talk
vile, the strongest of these words, tends to suggest disgusting depravity or filth.
a vile remark
Examples of base in a Sentence
Noun
their base obedience to every unprincipled action ordered by their leader
the army's base of attack was kept top secret until the battle began Verb
They are going to base their new company in Seattle.
The company has based itself in London.
Our tour group based itself in a hotel in the heart of the city. Adjective (1)
Iron is a base metal.
a base and sneaky act that is a clear violation of international law
Recent Examples on the Web
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Noun
The zipper closure at the base also keeps my comforter from slipping out.—Shea Simmons, PEOPLE, 11 Jan. 2026 The wood-table base does not read.—Jason P. Frank, Vulture, 10 Jan. 2026
Verb
Several vehicles that stopped behind her appear to belong to federal agents, based on activity observed in other videos.—Danya Gainor, CNN Money, 12 Jan. 2026 Cast members are chosen for pieces, most importantly, based on height and body dimensions.—Erika I. Ritchie, Oc Register, 12 Jan. 2026
Adjective
That’s on top of a base salary of $82,044 for all state lawmakers, up over 11% from the 2024 base pay.—Tim Dunn, Boston Herald, 12 Jan. 2026 If it’s enacted as currently written, the cap charge of a High Impact Player must be a minimum of 12% of the base salary cap, meaning Heaps would make $420,000 that would count against Denver’s cap and the rest of her salary would be pulled from the $1 million allotment pool.—Kyle Newman, Denver Post, 12 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for base
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin basis, from Greek, step, base, from bainein to go — more at come
: that portion of a bodily organ or part by which it is attached to another more central structure of the organism
the base of the thumb
2
a
: the usually inactive ingredient of a preparation serving as the vehicle for the active medicinal preparation
the fatty base of an ointment
b
: the chief active ingredient of a preparation
called alsobasis
3
a
: any of various typically water-soluble and bitter tasting compounds that in solution have a pH greater than 7, are capable of reacting with an acid to form a salt, and are molecules or ions able to take up a proton from an acid or able to give up an unshared pair of electrons to an acid compare alkali
b
: any of the five purine or pyrimidine bases of DNA and RNA that include cytosine, guanine, adenine, thymine, and uracil