0 the most important facts, ideas, etc. from which something is developed:
Loss is the underlying fundament of romantic music.
1 a person's bottom
The first mooted no principles, but was a series of improvised measures, often local, that nowhere changed the fundaments of the state.
Most of the ruins were demolished in the 1970s, only a tower and fundaments have survived.
From structural standpoint, these fundaments are rectilinear and rectangular constructions.
The theoretical fundaments of verification and falsification of reality are - severely taken - dissolving.
Only the princess grave and the fundaments of the mausoleum are distinguishable.
Since she did not know anything about the baseball game, she spent the entire season sit on the dugout and was paid to learn the fundaments of the game.
She is stretching out the way of seeing and viewing things while having joy of playing with the exposure, time and light itself- the basic fundaments of photography.
If the boundaries are changed too rapidly and fundament-ally, that link is destroyed.