Found 4 items, similar to Saltest.
English → Indonesian (Kamus Landak)
Definition: salt
garam
English → Indonesian (quick)
Definition: salt
garam, mengasini
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: salt
salt
adj 1: containing or filled with salt;
“salt water” [ant:
fresh]
2: of speech that is painful or bitter;
“salt scorn”-
Shakespeare;
“a salt apology”
3: one of the four basic taste sensations; like the taste of
sea water [syn:
salty]
salt
n 1: a compound formed by replacing hydrogen in an acid by a
metal (or a radical that acts like a metal)
2: white crystalline form of especially sodium chloride used to
season and preserve food [syn:
table salt,
common salt]
3: negotiations between the United States and the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics opened in 1969 in Helsinki
designed to limit both countries' stock of nuclear weapons
[syn:
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks]
4: the taste experience when salt is taken into the mouth [syn:
saltiness,
salinity]
salt
v 1: add salt to
2: sprinkle as if with salt;
“the rebels had salted the fields
with mines and traps”
3: add zest or liveliness to;
“She salts her lectures with
jokes”
4: preserve with salt;
“people used to salt meats on ships”
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Saltest
Salt
\Salt\, a. [Compar.
Salter; superl.
Saltest.] [AS.
sealt, salt. See
Salt, n.]
1. Of or relating to salt; abounding in, or containing, salt;
prepared or preserved with, or tasting of, salt; salted;
as, salt beef; salt water.
“Salt tears.” --Chaucer.
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2. Overflowed with, or growing in, salt water; as, a salt
marsh; salt grass.
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3. Fig.: Bitter; sharp; pungent.
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I have a salt and sorry rheum offends me. --Shak.
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4. Fig.: Salacious; lecherous; lustful. --Shak.
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Salt acid (Chem.), hydrochloric acid.
Salt block, an apparatus for evaporating brine; a salt
factory. --Knight.
Salt bottom, a flat piece of ground covered with saline
efflorescences. [Western U.S.] --Bartlett.
Salt cake (Chem.), the white caked mass, consisting of
sodium sulphate, which is obtained as the product of the
first stage in the manufacture of soda, according to
Leblanc's process.
Salt fish.
(a) Salted fish, especially cod, haddock, and similar
fishes that have been salted and dried for food.
(b) A marine fish.
Salt garden, an arrangement for the natural evaporation of
sea water for the production of salt, employing large
shallow basins excavated near the seashore.
Salt gauge, an instrument used to test the strength of
brine; a salimeter.
Salt horse, salted beef. [Slang]
Salt junk, hard salt beef for use at sea. [Slang]
Salt lick. See
Lick, n.
Salt marsh, grass land subject to the overflow of salt
water.
Salt-marsh caterpillar (Zo["o]l.), an American bombycid
moth (
Spilosoma acr[ae]a which is very destructive to
the salt-marsh grasses and to other crops. Called also
woolly bear. See Illust. under
Moth,
Pupa, and
Woolly bear, under
Woolly.
Salt-marsh fleabane (Bot.), a strong-scented composite herb
(
Pluchea camphorata) with rayless purplish heads,
growing in salt marshes.
Salt-marsh hen (Zo["o]l.), the clapper rail. See under
Rail.
Salt-marsh terrapin (Zo["o]l.), the diamond-back.
Salt mine, a mine where rock salt is obtained.
Salt pan.
(a) A large pan used for making salt by evaporation; also,
a shallow basin in the ground where salt water is
evaporated by the heat of the sun.
(b) pl. Salt works.
Salt pit, a pit where salt is obtained or made.
Salt rising, a kind of yeast in which common salt is a
principal ingredient. [U.S.]
Salt raker, one who collects salt in natural salt ponds, or
inclosures from the sea.
Salt sedative (Chem.), boracic acid. [Obs.]
Salt spring, a spring of salt water.
Salt tree (Bot.), a small leguminous tree (
Halimodendron argenteum
) growing in the salt plains of the Caspian
region and in Siberia.
Salt water, water impregnated with salt, as that of the
ocean and of certain seas and lakes; sometimes, also,
tears.
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Mine eyes are full of tears, I can not see;
And yet salt water blinds them not so much
But they can see a sort of traitors here. --Shak.
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Salt-water sailor, an ocean mariner.
Salt-water tailor. (Zo["o]l.) See
Bluefish.
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