Englishfor English speakers
bottom
Noun
—
The bottom of something is its lowest part.
Lucy took a pen and wrote her name at the bottom of the page.
He was wet from top to bottom.
it was wider at the top than the bottom.
Add wine to the pan and scrape up anything stuck to the pan bottom.
He stopped at the bottom of the stairs and looked back up.
I thought this ship was going to the bottom of the ocean.
I dropped it in the water and it quickly sank to the bottom.
She came downstairs and sat down on the bottom step.
—
If you are at the bottom, you are at the social lowest position.
Chicago still ranks near the bottom among major cities.
You don't have to wait until you've hit rock bottom to get help.
—
Your bottom is the round part between your legs and your back.
She ran into the tree and sat down hard on her bottom.
—
A bottom is the part of a set of clothing that you put your legs through.
Her pink top was perfect, but I didn't like how the bottom fit.
—
The bottom of an inning in baseball is its second half.
It's the bottom of the ninth inning and the score is tied.
bottom
Verb
—
If something bottoms (out), it stops going down.
When do you think the housing problems are going to bottom out?
Home prices have yet to bottom out.
strengthening
—
noun
becoming stronger
—
noun
the act of increasing the strength of something
ring
Noun
—
A circle.
The students sat in a ring.
—
A piece of metal in a circle usually worn in the ear or on the finger or toe.
She wore a ring on each finger.
—
A piece of material with the shape of a circle.
The O-rings went bad on my truck.
—
A high sound, especially of a telephone.
The ring of the phone woke me up.
—
The square area between four poles where people fight.
He climbed into the ring, ready to fight.
ring
Verb
—
To make a high sound, as a phone.
The phone rang.
—
To call someone.
He rings me every Thursday.
ring
Verb 2
—
To form a circle around.
They ringed the pair.