BASIS, or Base, in Chemistry. Any body which is dissolved by another body, which it receives and fixes, and with which it forms a compound, may be called the base of that compound. Thus, for example, the basis of neutral salts are the alkaline, earthy, and metallic matters which are saturated by the several acids, and form with them these neutral salts. In this sense it is that these neutral salts are called salts with earthy bases.
baser, salts with alkaline baser, salts with metallic baser; also the appellations basis of alum, basis of nure, basis of Glauber's salt, basis of vitriol, &c. signify the argillaceous earth, which, with the sulphuric acid, forms alum; the vegetable alkali, which, with the nitric acid, forms nitre; the mineral alkali, which, with the sulphuric acid, forms Glauber's salt; and the metal which with the sulphuric acid, forms a sulphate; because these substances are supposed to be fixed, unactive, and only yielding to the action of the acids, which they fix, and to which they give a body and consistence.