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 feather's fundament was held to the swelling and would draw out the venom.
They have a correct fundament and hard claws.
In the unmarked case, with no special topic, the subject is placed in the fundament position.
We must bear in mind the fact that those extraordinarily large and totally unelected public bodies will take decisions that will affect the fundament of people's lives.
We face fundament ally the same problems.
We cannot however visualise the life of any people merely in terms of the economic set-up, because, from the economic fundament there must emerge some sort of political superstructure.
Does he agree that education, as he appeared to indicate, is the very fundament to civilised advance?
If the boundaries are changed too rapidly and fundament-ally, that link is destroyed.