The difference between Bottom and Crown

When used as nouns, bottom means the lowest part of anything, whereas crown means a royal, imperial or princely headdress.

When used as verbs, bottom means to fall to the lowest point, whereas crown means to place a crown on the head of.

When used as adjectives, bottom means the lowest or last place or position, whereas crown means of, related to, or pertaining to a crown.


check bellow for the other definitions of Bottom and Crown

  1. Bottom as a noun:

    The lowest part of anything.

    Examples:

    "Footers appear at the bottoms of pages."

  2. Bottom as a noun (uncountable, British, slang):

    Character, reliability, staying power, dignity, integrity or sound judgment.

    Examples:

    "lack bottom"

  3. Bottom as a noun (British, US):

    A valley, often used in place names.

    Examples:

    "Where shall we go for a walk? How about Ashcombe Bottom?"

  4. Bottom as a noun:

    The buttocks or anus.

  5. Bottom as a noun (nautical):

    A cargo vessel, a ship.

  6. Bottom as a noun (nautical):

    Certain parts of a vessel, particularly the cargo hold or the portion of the ship that is always underwater.

  7. Bottom as a noun (baseball):

    The second half of an inning, the home team's turn at bat.

  8. Bottom as a noun (BDSM):

    A submissive in sadomasochistic sexual activity.

  9. Bottom as a noun (LGBT, slang):

    A man penetrated or with a preference for being penetrated during homosexual intercourse.

  10. Bottom as a noun (physics):

    A bottom quark.

  11. Bottom as a noun (often, figuratively):

    The lowest part of a container.

  12. Bottom as a noun:

    A ball or skein of thread; a cocoon.

  13. Bottom as a noun:

    The bed of a body of water, as of a river, lake, or sea.

  14. Bottom as a noun:

    An abyss.

    Examples:

    "rfquotek Dryden"

  15. Bottom as a noun (obsolete):

    Power of endurance.

    Examples:

    "a horse of a good bottom"

  16. Bottom as a noun (obsolete):

    Dregs or grounds; lees; sediment.

    Examples:

    "rfquotek Johnson"

  17. Bottom as a noun (usually: [[bottoms]] or [[bottomland]]):

    Low-lying land near a river with alluvial soil.

  1. Bottom as a verb:

    To fall to the lowest point.

  2. Bottom as a verb:

    To establish firmly; to found or justify on or upon something; to set on a firm footing; to set or rest on or upon something which provides support or authority.

  3. Bottom as a verb (intransitive):

    To rest, as upon an ultimate support; to be based or grounded.

  4. Bottom as a verb (intransitive):

    To reach or impinge against the bottom, so as to impede free action, as when the point of a cog strikes the bottom of a space between two other cogs, or a piston the end of a cylinder.

  5. Bottom as a verb (obsolete, transitive):

    To wind round something, as in making a ball of thread.

  6. Bottom as a verb (transitive):

    To furnish with a bottom.

    Examples:

    "to bottom a chair"

  7. Bottom as a verb (intransitive):

    To be the submissive in a BDSM relationship or roleplay.

  8. Bottom as a verb (intransitive):

    To be anally penetrated in gay sex.

    Examples:

    "I've never bottomed in my life."

  1. Bottom as an adjective:

    The lowest or last place or position.

    Examples:

    "Those files should go on the bottom shelf."

  1. Crown as a noun:

    A royal, imperial or princely headdress; a diadem.

  2. Crown as a noun (heraldry):

    A representation of such a headdress, as in heraldry; it may even be that only the image exists, no physical crown, as in the case of the kingdom of Belgium; by analogy such crowns can be awarded to moral persons that don't even have a head, as the mural crown for cities in heraldry

  3. Crown as a noun:

    A wreath or band for the head, especially one given as reward of victory or a mark of honor.

  4. Crown as a noun (by extension):

    Any reward of victory or mark of honor.

    Examples:

    "the martyr's crown"

  5. Crown as a noun:

    Imperial or regal power, or those who wield it.

  6. Crown as a noun (metonym):

    The sovereign (in a monarchy), as head of state.

  7. Crown as a noun (by extension, especially in, _, legal):

    The state, the government (headed by a monarch).

    Examples:

    "Treasure recovered from shipwrecks automatically becomes property of the Crown."

  8. Crown as a noun:

    The top part of something: The topmost part of the head. The highest part of a hill. The top section of a hat, above the brim. The raised centre of a road. The highest part of an arch. The upper range of facets in a rose diamond. The dome of a furnace.

  9. Crown as a noun (architecture):

    A kind of spire or lantern formed by converging flying buttresses.

  10. Crown as a noun:

    Splendor; culmination; acme.

  11. Crown as a noun (translation):

    Any currency (originally) issued by the crown (regal power) and often bearing a crown (headdress); various currencies known by similar names in their native languages, such as the koruna, kruna, krone.

  12. Crown as a noun (historical):

    A former pre-decimalization British coin worth five shillings.

  13. Crown as a noun (botany):

    The part of a plant where the root and stem meet.

  14. Crown as a noun (forestry):

    The top of a tree.

  15. Crown as a noun (anatomy):

    The part of a tooth above the gums.

  16. Crown as a noun (dentistry):

    A prosthetic covering for a tooth.

  17. Crown as a noun (nautical):

    A knot formed in the end of a rope by tucking in the strands to prevent them from unravelling

  18. Crown as a noun (nautical):

    The part of an anchor where the arms and the shank meet

  19. Crown as a noun (nautical):

    The rounding, or rounded part, of the deck from a level line.

  20. Crown as a noun (nautical, in the plural):

    The bights formed by the turns of a cable.

    Examples:

    "rfquotek Totten"

  21. Crown as a noun (paper):

    In England, a standard size of printing paper measuring 20 × 15 inches.

  22. Crown as a noun (paper):

    In American, a standard size of writing paper measuring 19 × 15 inches.

  23. Crown as a noun (chemistry):

    A monocyclic ligand having three or more binding sites, capable of holding a guest in a central location

  24. Crown as a noun (medical):

    During childbirth, the appearance of the baby's head from the mother's vagina

  25. Crown as a noun (firearms):

    A rounding or smoothing of the barrel opening

  26. Crown as a noun (geometry):

    The area enclosed between two concentric perimeters.

  27. Crown as a noun (religion):

    A round spot shaved clean on the top of the head, as a mark of the clerical state; the tonsure.

  28. Crown as a noun:

    A whole turkey with the legs and wings removed to produce a joint of white meat.

  29. Crown as a noun (AAVE, colloquial):

    A formal hat worn by women to Sunday church services; a church crown.

  30. Crown as a noun:

    The knurled knob or dial, on the outside of a watch case, used to wind it or adjust the hands

  1. Crown as an adjective:

    Of, related to, or pertaining to a crown.

    Examples:

    "crown prince"

  2. Crown as an adjective:

    Of, related to, pertaining to the top of a tree or trees.

    Examples:

    "a crown fire"

  1. Crown as a verb:

    To place a crown on the head of.

  2. Crown as a verb:

    To formally declare (someone) a king, queen, emperor, etc.

  3. Crown as a verb:

    To bestow something upon as a mark of honour, dignity, or recompense; to adorn; to dignify.

  4. Crown as a verb:

    To form the topmost or finishing part of; to complete; to consummate; to perfect.

  5. Crown as a verb:

    To declare (someone) a winner.

  6. Crown as a verb (medicine):

    Of a baby, during the birthing process; for the surface of the baby's head to appear in the vaginal opening.

    Examples:

    "The mother was in the second stage of labor and the fetus had just crowned, prompting a round of encouragement from the midwives."

  7. Crown as a verb (transitive):

    To cause to round upward; to make anything higher at the middle than at the edges, such as the face of a machine pulley.

  8. Crown as a verb:

    To hit on the head.

  9. Crown as a verb (video games):

    To shoot an opponent in the back of the head with a shotgun in a first-person shooter video game.

  10. Crown as a verb (board games):

    In checkers, to stack two checkers to indicate that the piece has become a king.

    Examples:

    "“Crown me!” I said, as I moved my checker to the back row."

  11. Crown as a verb (firearms):

    To widen the opening of the barrel.

  12. Crown as a verb (military):

    To effect a lodgment upon, as upon the crest of the glacis, or the summit of the breach.

  13. Crown as a verb (nautical):

    To lay the ends of the strands of (a knot) over and under each other.

  1. Crown as a verb (archaic):