Base

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Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [1]

BASE . To be base is in mod. English to be morally bad, but in AV [Note: Authorized Version.] it is no more than to be of humble birth or lowly position. In the RV [Note: Revised Version.] , however, the word is sometimes used in the sense of morally low, mean, as Deuteronomy 13:13 .

King James Dictionary [2]

BASE, a.

1. Low in place. Obs.

2. Mean vile worthless that is, low in value or estimation used of things.

3. Of low station of mean account without rank, dignity or estimation among men used of persons.

The base shall behave proudly against the honorable. Is.iii.

4. Of mean spirit disingenuous illiberal low without dignity of sentiment as a base and abject multitude.

5. Of little comparative value applied to metals, and perhaps to all metals, except gold and silver.

6. Deep grave applied to sounds as the base sounds of a viol.

7. Of illegitimate birth born out of wedlock.

8. Not held by honorable tenure. A base estate is an estate held by services not honorable,not in capite, or by villenage. Such a tenure is called base, or low, and the tenant, a base tenant. So writers on the laws of England use the terms, a base fee, a base court.

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Such a tenure is called base, or low, and the tenant, a base tenant. So writers on the laws of England use the terms, a base fee, a base court.

BASE, n. L. basis that which is set, the foundation or bottom.

1. The bottom of any thing, considered as its support or the part of a thing on which it stands or rests as the base of a column, the pedestal of a statue, the foundation of a house,&c.

In architecture, the base of a pillar properly is that part which is between the top of a pedestal and the bottom of the shaft but when there is no pedestal, it is the part between the bottom of the column and the plinth. Usually it consists of certain spires or circles. The pedestal also has its base.

2. In fortification, the exterior side of the polygon, or that imaginary line which is drawn from the flanked angle of a bastion to the angle opposite to it.

3. In gunnery, the least sort of ordnance, the diameter of whose bore Isaiah 50:1/4 inch.

4. The part of any ornament which hangs down, as housings.

5. The broad part of any thing, as the bottom of a cone.

6. In old authors, stockings armor for the legs.

7. The place from which racers or tilters start the bottom of the field the carcer or starting post.

8. The lowest or gravest part in music improperly written bass.

9. A rustic play, called also bays, or prison bars.

10. In geometry, the lowest side of the perimeter of a figure. Any side of a triangle may be called its base, but this term most properly belongs to the side which is parallel to the horizon. In rectangled triangles, the base, properly, is the side opposite to the right angle. The base of a solid figure is that on which it stands. The base of a conic section is a right line in the hyperbola and parabola, arising from the common intersection of the secant plane and the base of the cone.

11. In chimistry, any body which is dissolved by another body, which it receives and fixes. Thus any alkaline, earthy or metallic substance, combining with an acid, forms a compound or neutral salt, of which it is the base. Such salts are called salts with alkaline, earthy or metallic bases.

12. Thorough base, in music, is the part performed with base viols or theorbos, while the voices sing and other instruments perform their parts, or during the intervals when the other parts stop. It is distinguished by figures over the notes.

Counter base is a second or double base, when there are several in the same concert.

BASE, To embase to reduce the value by the admixture of meaner metals. Little used.

2. To found to lay the base or foundation.

To base and build the commonwealth of man.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [3]

bās :

(1) Substantive from Latin basis , Greek βάσις , básis , a foundation. ( a ) ( מכונה , mekhōnāh ): the fixed resting-place on which the lavers in Solomon's temple were set (1 Ki 7:27-43; 2 Kings 16:17; 2 Kings 25:13 , 2 Kings 25:16; 2 Chronicles 4:14; Jeremiah 27:19; Jeremiah 52:17 , Jeremiah 52:20; compare Ezra 3:3; Zechariah 5:11 the American Revised Version, margin). ( b ) ( כּן , kēn ): pedestal in the King James Version and the Revised Version (British and American) ( 1 Kings 7:29 , 1 Kings 7:31 ) and in the Revised Version (British and American) only ( Exodus 30:18 , Exodus 30:28; Exodus 31:9; Exodus 35:16; Exodus 38:8; Exodus 39:39; Exodus 40:11; Leviticus 8:11 ) of the base of the laver of the tabernacle (the King James Version "foot"). ( c ) ( ירך , yārēkh ): "base of candlestick" (the Revised Version (British and American) of Exodus 25:31; Exodus 37:17 ) the King James Version "shaft." ( d ) ( יסוד , yeṣōdh ): the Revised Version (British and American) "base of altar"; the King James Version "bottom" ( Exodus 29:12; Exodus 38:8; Leviticus 4:7 , Leviticus 4:18 , Leviticus 4:25 , Leviticus 4:30 , Leviticus 4:34; Leviticus 5:9; Leviticus 8:15; Leviticus 9:9 ). ( e ) ( גּב , gabh ): the Revised Version (British and American) "elevation," i.e. basement of altar; the King James Version "higher place" ( Ezekiel 43:13 ).

(2) Adjective from French bas - low, or Welsh bâs - "shallow": of lowly birth or station, of voluntary humility and of moral depravity. ( a ) ( שׁפל , shāphāl , שפל , shephal ): of David's self-humiliation ( 2 Samuel 6:22 ): "a modest unambitious kingdom" ( Ezekiel 17:14; Ezekiel 29:14 , Ezekiel 29:15 ( BDB ); Daniel 4:17 (the American Standard Revised Version "lowest")): compare shephēlāh = "lowland." ( b ) ( קלה , ḳālāh ): men of humble birth and station as opposed to the nobles ( Isaiah 3:5 ). ( c ) ( בּלי־שׁם , b elı̄ - shēm ): "nameless," "of no account": "children of fools, yea, children of base men" ( Job 30:8 ). ( d ) The King James Version men, sons, daughters, children of Belial; literally "worthless persons"; in the American Standard Revised Version "base," except 1 Samuel 1:16 "wicked woman"; also the English Revised Version of Deuteronomy 13:13 , "base," which elsewhere retains the King James Version rendering. ( e ) ( ταπεινός , tapeinós ): "lowly," "humble or abject" ( 2 Corinthians 10:1 ); the Revised Version (British and American), "lowly"; so Paul's enemies said he appeared when present in the church at Corinth. ( f ) ( ἀγενής , agenḗs ): "of low birth," "of no account" ( 1 Corinthians 1:28 ): "base things of the world." ( g ) ( ἀγοραῖος , agoraı́os ): "belonging to the market-place," loafers, worthless characters ( Acts 17:5 ): "certain lewd fellows of the baser sort"; the Revised Version (British and American) "certain vile fellows of the rabble."

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [4]

(as a noun) is the rendering in the Auth. Vers. of two Hebrews words:

1. כֵּן, ken, the foundation or pedestal, e.g. of the laver (q.v.) in the temple- court ("foot," Exodus 30:18, etc.); then, the "base over the ledges" ( שְׁלִבַּם, joints) of the brazen sea (q.v.), in 1 Kings 7:29, apparently explained in 1 Kings 7:31 as a "work' of the base" ( מִעֲשֵׂהאּכֵן ), perhaps a pediment-like cornice covering the joints; but the whole description is exceedingly obscure. (See Ledge).

2. מְכוֹנָה mekonah', or מְכוּנָה, mekunah', a foot-piece or stand upon which to place the lavers in the temple-service ( 1 Kings 7:27-43, etc.). (See Laver).

References