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A Writer's Dictionary:

salt something away Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with S » Salian ... salubriously » salt something away


salt
noun
    1. sodium chlorideespecially as used to season and preserve food.
    2. A saltcellar.
    3. chem.
      A chemical compound that is formed when an acid reacts with a base.
    4. Liveliness; interest, wit or good sense.
      Example: Her opinion added salt to the debate
    5. An experienced and usually old sailor.
      Form: old salt (also)
    6. smelling-salts.
      Form: salts
    7. Any substance resembling salt in appearance or taste, especially a medicine.
      Example: Epsom salts
      Form: salts
    8. A salting or saltmarsh.
adj
    1. Containing salt.
      Example: salt water
    2. Tasting of salt.
    3. Preserved or cured with salt.
      Example: salt pork
    4. Covered over with or immersed in salt water.
    5. Said of a plant: growing in salt soil.
verb salted, salting
    1. To season or preserve (food) with salt.
    2. To cover (an icy road) with a scattering of salt to melt the ice.
    3. To add piquancy, interest or wit to something.
    4. mining., slang
      To add gold, precious ore, etc to (a mine) to give a deceptive appearance of riches to the mine.
Derivative: saltish
adj
    Derivative: saltishness
    noun
      Derivative: saltless
      adj
        Derivative: saltly
        adverb
          Idiom: lay salt on someone's tail (put salt on someone's tail, cast salt on someone's tail)
            To find or catch someone, from the humorously recommended method of catching a bird.
          Idiom: go through something like a dose of salts
            colloq
            To do or finish it very quickly.
          Idiom: rub salt in someone's wounds
            To add to their discomfort, sorrow, shame, etc.
          Idiom: the salt of the earth
            A consistently reliable or dependable person.
          Idiom: take something with a pinch of salt
            To treat a statement or proposition sceptically, or with suspicion and reservation.
          Idiom: worth one's salt
            Competent or useful; worthy of respect.
          Etymology: Anglo-Saxon.

          Phrasal Verb: salt something away
            To store it up for future use; to hoard it, especially in a miserly way.


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