salt
suomi-englanti sanakirjasalt englannista suomeksi
höystää, maustaa
suolaisuus
silotella
maustaa suolalla, lisätä suolaa
suola
suolata
suolainen
Substantiivi
Verbi
salt englanniksi
SALT
(senseid) A common substance, chemically consisting mainly of chloride (NaCl), used extensively as a condiment and preservative.
(quote-book)|translation=Take good almond milk made with wine, and let it boil together, and add thereto Saffron and Salt; (..)|year=1430|page=11|year_published=1888|editor=Thomas Austin|volume=1|series=Early English Text Society, Original Series|seriesvolume=91|oclc=374760374760|publisher=Routledge; N. Trübner & Co.|location=London
(quote-book)
(senseid) One of the compounds formed from the reaction of an acid with a base, where a positive ion replaces a hydrogen of the acid.
A marsh, a saline marsh at the shore of a sea.
A sailor (qualifier).
(RQ:Melville Moby-Dick)
A sequence of random data added to text data (such as passwords or messages) prior to encryption or hashing, in order to make force decryption more difficult.
A person who seeks employment at a company in order to (once employed by it) help unionize it.
(RQ:Shakespeare Merry Wives) we have some salt of our youth in us.
''Attic salt''
A dish for salt at table; a cellar.
{{RQ:Pepys Diary|IV|9 September 1664
Skepticism and sense.
(ux)
(senseid) Tears; indignation; outrage; arguing.
Of water: containing salt, saline.
(collocation)
(quote-book)|title=For the Term of His Natural Life|publisher=Penguin|year_published=2009|page=97
Treated with salt as a preservative; cured with salt, salted.
(RQ:Lincoln Pratt's Patients)and came back with a salt mackerel that dripped brine like a rainstorm.
Of land, fields etc.: flooded by the sea.
Of plants: growing in the sea or on land flooded by the sea.
Related to salt deposits, excavation, processing or use.
Bitter; sharp; pungent.
(RQ:Shakespeare Othello).
Salacious; lecherous; lustful; (of animals) in heat.
(RQ:Shakespeare Othello)
(quote-text)|title=The (w) of the works of Mr. (w)|section=Book 2, Chapter 22, p. 153|url=http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A91655.0001.001
To add salt to.
''to salt fish, beef, or pork''; ''to salt the city streets in the winter''
To fill with salt between the timbers and planks for the preservation of the timber.
To insert or inject something into an object to give it properties it would not naturally have.
To blast metal into (qualifier) in order to cause to appear to be a productive seam.
To add bogus evidence to an archaeological site.
To add certain chemical elements to (a nuclear or conventional weapon) so that it generates more radiation.
{{quote-text|en|year=1964|author=U.S. Atomic Energy Commission|title=The Effects of Nuclear Weapons|page=417
To sprinkle throughout.
(quote-journal)
{{quote-text|en|year=1993|title=The Journal of Jewish Thought & Philosophy|page=154
To add filler bytes before encrypting, in order to make brute-force decryption more resource-intensive.
To render a thing useless.
To sow with salt ''(of land)'', symbolizing a curse on its re-inhabitation.
To lock a page title so it cannot be created.
1616, (w), ''(w)'', in Gifford’s 1816 edition volume V page 67
- (quote)
(topics) (l)
1562, Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq:
- Salt. Sal.
(infl of)
salty, (l)
(l)
(inflection of)
(romanization of)
to freeze
(l) (gloss)
Something containing or for storing salt
Any of a group of crystalline compounds that resemble salt
salty, tasting of salt
salted, coated in salt
''salte peanøtter - salted peanuts''
(l), (l)
(verb form of)
(ant)
chloride (NaCl), used extensively as a condiment and preservative.
One of the compounds formed from the reaction of an acid with a base, where a positive ion replaces a hydrogen of the acid.
(n-g): literally