Base level
the lowest level to which running water can erode the land.
historical examples
the top and base level of each piece of wall had to be marked on it; and the levels could then be measured off to fixed points.
history of egypt from 330 b.c. to the present time, volume 12 (of 12) s. rappoport
the small loop end will stick out below the spiral and prevent it standing on a base level.
the library of work and play: working in metals charles conrad sleffel
noun
the lowest level to which a land surface can be eroded by streams, which is, ultimately, sea level
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baseball. the area between bases within which a base runner must keep when running from one base to another. tennis. the line at each end of a tennis court, parallel to the net, that marks the in-bounds limit of play. (in perspective drawing) a horizontal line in the immediate foreground formed by the intersection of […]
- Baseliner
a player who typically plays near the baseline using ground strokes, as distinguished from one who typically goes to the net. noun (tennis) a player who plays most of his or her shots from the back of court
- Base load
the constant or permanent load on a power supply. noun the more or less constant part of the total load on an electrical power-supply system compare peak load
- Base map
an outline map of an area to which specific information is added for any of various purposes. historical examples anyone who attempts to draw a base map must, first of all, know how each feature or part of the map should be represented. the preparation of ill-strations for reports of the united states geological survey […]
- Base memory
base memory hardware, jargon the lowest 640 kilobytes of memory in an ibm pc-compatible computer running ms-dos. other pc operating systems can usually compensate and “ignore” the fact that there is a 640k limit to base memory. this was put in place because the original cpu – the intel 8088 – could only access one […]