Dictionary
been base
noun
Something from which other things extend; a foundation.
Exact(5)
And it would have been base ingratitude for me to refuse to sit with Aunt Galya and listen to her stories, so most nights I listened.
Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky, complained to reporters here on Wednesday that "when you get beyond the spin, the attacks this week have been base and vile, and even if they are delivered with a smile, they are still attacks".
Similar contempt appeared this week after the death of Dean Potter, a pioneering rock climber who had been Base jumping for over a decade, and who had devoted his life to turning a childhood nightmare about falling into a dream of flying.
Peace House had also been base camp for Picciotto -- who has an anti-Zionist streak that sometimes gets her called an anti-Semite -- in her 30-some year protest.
McClernon had been base commander during the time the university was being established —partially on land deeded to it by the Air Force base —and also had been a two-term mayor of Fairborn.
Similar(55)
Prosecuting the second charge--a felony for which King could have faced a three-year prison sentence--would have been "base-line unfair" because the alleged offense happened so long ago, Garcetti said.
A mutant mRNA, GFP-dazl ΔmiR-430 site, in which the octamer target site had been base-substituted, had a long poly(A) tail approximately 150 nt long (Fig. 5C).
WHAT is BASE jumping?
Just three were Base jumpers.
Finally, there is "base broadening".
Bunting is overrated, as is base stealing.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com