Salt

ahd-5
  • noun. A colorless or white crystalline solid, chiefly sodium chloride, used extensively in ground or granulated form as a food seasoning and preservative.
  • noun. An ionic chemical compound formed by replacing all or part of the hydrogen ions of an acid with metal ions or other cations.
  • noun. Any of various mineral salts used as laxatives or cathartics.
  • noun. Smelling salts.
  • noun. Epsom salts.
  • noun. An element that gives flavor or zest.
  • noun. Sharp lively wit.
  • noun. A sailor, especially when old or experienced.
  • noun. A saltcellar.
  • adjective. Containing or filled with salt.
  • adjective. Having a salty taste or smell.
  • adjective. Preserved in salt or a salt solution.
  • adjective. undefined
  • adjective. Flooded with seawater.
  • adjective. Found in or near such a flooded area.
  • transitive verb. To add, treat, season, or sprinkle with salt.
  • transitive verb. To cure or preserve by treating with salt or a salt solution.
  • transitive verb. To provide salt for (deer or cattle).
  • transitive verb. To add zest or liveliness to.
  • transitive verb. To give an appearance of value to by fraudulent means, especially to place valuable minerals in (a mine) for the purpose of deceiving.
  • phrasal verb. To put aside; save.
  • phrasal verb. To separate (a dissolved substance) by adding salt to the solution.
  • idiom. (salt of the earth) A person or group considered the best or most worthy part of society.
  • idiom. (worth (one's) salt) Efficient and capable.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • To sprinkle, impregnate, or season with salt, or with a salt: as, to salt fish, beef, or pork.
  • To fill with salt between the timbers and planks, as a ship, for the preservation of the timber.
  • To furnish with salt; feed salt to: as, to salt cows.
  • In soap-making, to add salt to (the lye in the kettles) after saponification of the fatty ingredients, in order to separate the soap from the lye.
  • In photography, to impregnate (paper, canvas, or other tissue) with a salt or mixture of salts in solution, which, when treated with other solutions, form new compounds in the texture.
  • To make, as a freshman, drink salt water, by way of initiation, according to a university custom of the sixteenth century.
  • To deposit salt, as a saline substance: as, the brine begins to salt.
  • noun. plural In glass manufacturing, same as glass-gall. See anatron, 1.
  • noun. plural A name given to mixed saline masses obtained by evaporating the water of mineral springs, or by artificially mixing the saline constituents of such springs in the proportions indicated by analysis of the water: as, Karlsbad salts, Vichy salts, etc.
  • noun. A salt which exhibits alkaline reaction or changes the red color of moist litmus-paper to blue, as does disodium orthophosphate.
  • noun. An impure common salt from India, colored by admixture with tannate of iron. See bitnoben.
  • To enrich (a natural deposit) by artificial means, usually for the purpose of deceiving prospective purchasers. Thus a gold-mine is salted when powdered gold is shot into the rock with a gun; a sample is salted when metal, or rich ore, is mixed with it; a mineral spring is salted by the addition of salts; an oil-well by the addition of rich oils, etc.
  • noun. See sault.
  • noun. A compound (NaCl) of chlorin with the metallic base of the alkali soda, one of the most abundantly disseminated and important of all substances.
  • noun. In chem., any acid in which one or more atoms of hydrogen have been replaced with metallic atoms or basic radicals; any base in which the hydrogen atoms have been more or less replaced by non-metallic atoms or acid radicals; also, the product of the direct union of a metallic oxid and an anhydrid.
  • noun. plural A salt (as Epsom salts, etc.) used as a medicine. See also smelling-salts.
  • noun. A marshy place flooded by the tide.
  • noun. A salt-cellar.
  • noun. In heraldry, a bearing representing a high decorative salt-cellar, intended to resemble those used in the middle ages. In modern delineations this is merely a covered vase.
  • noun. Seasoning; that which preserves a thing from corruption, or gives taste and pungency to it.
  • noun. Taste; smack; savor; flavor.
  • noun. Wit; piquancy; pungency; sarcasm: as, Attic salt (which see, under Attic).
  • noun. Modification; hence, allowance; abatement; reserve: as, to take a thing with a grain of salt (see phrase below).
  • noun. A bronzing material, the chlorid or butter of antimony, used in browning gun-barrels and other iron articles.
  • noun. Lecherous desire.
  • noun. A sailor, especially an experienced sailor.
  • Word Usage
    "Put it into a pail having a close-fitting cover and pack in pounded ice and salt, -- _rock salt_, not the common kind, -- about three-fourths ice and one-forth salt."
    Antonyms
    Words with the opposite meaning
    desalt  
    Form
    desalt  
    has_topic
    Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    Rhyme
    Words with the same terminal sound
    Perrault  Renault  Walt  assault  basalt  
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts
    acid  agree  date  definite  egg  
    Synonym
    Words with the same meaning
    verb-form
    salted  salting  salts