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Basis   /bˈeɪsəs/  /bˈeɪsɪs/   Listen
Basis

noun
(pl. bases)
1.
A relation that provides the foundation for something.  Synonyms: footing, ground.  "He worked on an interim basis"
2.
The fundamental assumptions from which something is begun or developed or calculated or explained.  Synonyms: base, cornerstone, foundation, fundament, groundwork.
3.
The most important or necessary part of something.  Synonym: base.



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"Basis" Quotes from Famous Books



... history. In the Middle Ages there was but one criterion for every question that arose, and that criterion was the past. Whatever had been, should continue. All Church dogmas were settled by an appeal to the ancient Fathers; all political aspirations were fought out on the basis of descent. Tradition was the god of mediaeval Europe. At last, however, questions arose for which tradition had no answer. On the Renaissance in Italy, on the invention of printing and of gunpowder, on the discovery of America, the ancient Fathers had not spoken. On these things, therefore, ...
— The Swedish Revolution Under Gustavus Vasa • Paul Barron Watson

... etc., are still less pure varieties of C. Construct a table of the naturally occurring forms of this element, in the order of their purity. Carbon forms the basis of all vegetable and animal life; it is found in many rocks, mineral oils, asphaltum, natural gas, and in the air ...
— An Introduction to Chemical Science • R.P. Williams

... Christian sects was held the judgment of God, between them and their chief enemy—the death of the Emperor Julian. But I have no means of tracing, and will not conjecture, the course of his own thoughts, until the tenor of all his life was changed at his baptism. The candour which lies at the basis of his character has given us one sentence of his own, respecting that change, which is worth some volumes of ordinary confessions. "I left, not only parents and kindred, but the accustomed luxuries of delicate life." The words throw full light on what, to our less courageous ...
— Our Fathers Have Told Us - Part I. The Bible of Amiens • John Ruskin

... Vassili knew how to establish permanently the nature of one government by constituting in autocracy the necessary attribute of empire, its sole constitution, and the only basis of safety, force and prosperity. This limitless power of the prince is regarded as tyranny in the eye of strangers, because, in their inconsiderate judgment, they forget that tyranny is the abuse of autocracy, and that the ...
— The Empire of Russia • John S. C. Abbott

... with the "Tillicum" and afterwards returned to give us a late supper. Desire kept out of my way. One might almost have thought that she was shy—if so, a most perplexing development. For why should she feel shy? It wasn't as if we had not put the whole affair on a perfectly business basis. Perhaps there is some elemental magic in names, so that, to a woman, the very word "marriage" has power to ...
— The Window-Gazer • Isabel Ecclestone Mackay


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