salt%c4%b1k%c3%a7%c4%b1 teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Salt Lake City
- The capital city of Utah, USA
- Salt River
- Used in reference to losing an election; found especially in the phrase "rowed up Salt River"
- salt
- To add filler bytes before encrypting, in order to make brute-force decryption more resource-intensive
- salt
- A kind of marsh at the shore of a sea (short for salt marsh, apparently not in a wide-spread use)
- salt
- Additional bytes inserted into a plaintext message before encryption, in order to increase randomness and render brute-force decryption more difficult
- salt
- To include colorful language in
- salt
- A common substance, chemically consisting mainly of sodium chloride (NaCl), used extensively as a condiment and preservative
- salt
- To add salt to
- salt
- Salty
You can't drink seawater because it is too salty.
- You can't drink seawater because it's too salty.
You can't drink seawater because it's too salty.
- You can't drink seawater because it is too salty.
- salt
- Saline
- salt
- To add bogus evidence to an archeological site
- salt
- To insert or inject something into an object to give it properties it would not naturally have
- salt
- A sailor (also old salt)
I never go as a passenger; nor, though I am something of a salt, do I ever go to sea as a Commodore, or a Captain, or a Cook.
- salt
- A person that engages in the political act of seeking employment at a company in order to help unionize it
- salt
- To blast gold into (as a portion of a mine) in order to cause to appear to be a productive seam
- salt
- One of the compounds formed from the reaction of an acid with a base, where a positive ion replaces a hydrogen of the acid
- salt and pepper
- Mixed black and white
- salt cedar
- Name for an invasive plant of the Southwest United States (native to Eurasia) of the genus Tamarisk. Originally imported as an ornamental plant when it escapes into the wild it is considered a weed because it crowds out native plants
- salt cedars
- plural form of salt cedar
- salt cellar
- A small open container holding salt for use in the kitchen or on a dining table
- salt cellar
- A salt shaker
- salt cellars
- plural form of salt cellar
- salt clay
- A dough usually made mainly from salt, flour and water (sometimes with cornstarch), moldable into shapes while soft but which then hardens
- salt cod
- cod that has been dried and salted
- salt cods
- plural form of salt cod
- salt dome
- An upwelling of crystalline rock salt and its aureole of deformed sediments
- salt domes
- plural form of salt dome
- salt dough map
- A three-dimensional relief map, made from salt dough or a similar substance, often by children for educational purposes
- salt dough maps
- plural form of salt dough map
- salt flat
- a dry lake bed consisting primarily of salt
- salt gland
- a specialized gland, located near the eyes or nose of certain marine animals that secretes a liquid having a high salt content; it enables the animal to drink seawater without having to eliminate the excess salt through the kidneys
- salt marsh
- A marsh of saline water, found in the intertidal zone between land and sea, characterized by halophytic plants such as grasses and sedges adapted to periodic flooding with salt water
- salt marshes
- plural form of salt marsh
- salt mine
- Any laborious work, especially in a confined space
- salt mine
- Any mine used for the extraction of salt
- salt of the earth
- A decent, dependable, unpretentious person
- salt of the earth
- A most worthy person
Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of men.
- salt pan
- A flat expanse of ground naturally covered with salt and other minerals; this is the accumulation of salts and minerals as water, unable to drain into the ground, evaporates
- salt pan
- A man-made pond where salty water is evaporated to concentrate it during the making of salt
- salt pans
- plural form of salt pan
- salt shaker
- A small container designed to hold salt and facilitate sprinkling it on food for seasoning purposes
- salt shakers
- plural form of salt shaker
- salt substitute
- A substance that tastes salty but contains less or no sodium than table salt (sodium chloride)
- salt substitutes
- plural form of salt substitute
- salt water
- any water containing dissolved salt; brine
- salt-and-pepper
- Having a color pattern resembling many small speckles of black and white
fabric with a salt-and-pepper pattern.
- salt-effect distillation
- a technique of extractive distillation in which a salt or a non-volatile liquid is added to the mixture being distilled in order to remove azeotropes and aid separation
- salt
- {v} to season, mix or sprinkle with salt
- salt
- {a} having the taste of salt, lustful, wanton
- salt
- {n} a substance which affects the taste, dissolves in water and crystalizes, the species are numerous and various, also wit, taste, a vessel to hold salt
- salt out
- Precipitate, coagulate, or separate (as a dissolved substance) especially from a solution by the addition of salt intransitive verb : to become salted out
- salt-cured meat
- Salt-cured meat or salted meat, for example ham, bacon or kippered herring, is meat or fish preserved or cured by salt or brine
- SALT
- {i} series of talks between the United States and the Soviet Union for the purpose of limiting strategic nuclear arms (began in 1969)
- SALT talks
- conferences between the United States and the Soviet Union on reducing nuclear armament
- Salt Lake City
- capital city of Utah (USA)
- Salt Lake City
- The capital and largest city of Utah, in the north-central part of the state near Great Salt Lake. Brigham Young and his followers settled here in 1847, establishing it as the center of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Population: 159,936. the capital city of Utah in the western US. It is the centre of the Mormon religion. City (pop., 2000: 181,743), capital of Utah, U.S. Located on the Jordan River, near the southeastern end of Great Salt Lake, it was founded in 1847 by Brigham Young and a group of 148 Mormons as a refuge from religious persecution. It was known as Great Salt Lake City until 1868. It prospered from rail connections to become a hub of western commerce and became the state capital in 1896. The largest city in the state, it lies at an altitude of 4,390 ft (1,338 m). It is a commercial centre for nearby mining operations and has diversified manufacturing industries. It is the headquarters of the Mormon Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which influences the social, economic, political, and cultural life of the state and region. It is the site of the Mormon Temple and Tabernacle. It was the host city of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games
- Salt N Pepa
- American rap/pop music group
- Salt River
- River, east-central Arizona, U.S. A tributary of the Gila River, it is formed at the confluence of the Black and White rivers. It flows west 200 mi (320 km) and empties into the Gila River southwest of Phoenix. It is part of the Colorado River drainage basin. A system of dams forms a chain of lakes that provides hydroelectric power. In pre-Columbian times the river valley was cultivated by Hohokam Indians who constructed systems of irrigation canals
- salt
- add salt to of speech that is painful or bitter; "salt scorn"- Shakespeare; "a salt apology"
- salt
- Sulphate of magnesia having cathartic qualities; originally prepared by boiling down the mineral waters at Epsom, England, whence the name; afterwards prepared from sea water; but now from certain minerals, as from siliceous hydrate of magnesia
- salt
- A sailor; usually qualified by old
- salt
- Bitter; sharp; pungent
- salt
- If someone or something rubs salt into the wound, they make the unpleasant situation that you are in even worse, often by reminding you of your failures or faults. I had no intention of rubbing salt into a friend's wounds, so all I said was that I did not give interviews. Strategic Arms Limitation Talks. Strategic Arms Limitation Talks talks between the US and the former Soviet Union, which aimed to reach agreement about limiting the number of nuclear weapons that each country kept. Two SALT Treaties (=official agreements) were signed: SALT I (1972) and SALT II (1979). Chemical compound formed when the hydrogen of an acid is replaced by a metal or its equivalent, such as ammonium (NH4). Typically, an acid and a base react to form a salt and water. Most inorganic salts ionize (see ion) in water solution. Sodium chloride common table salt is the most familiar salt; sodium bicarbonate (bicarbonate of soda), silver nitrate, and calcium carbonate are others. Great Salt Lake salt dome Salt Lake City Salt River table salt
- salt
- Marshes flooded by the tide
- salt
- a substance needed to live, made of the elements sodium and chloride SOLID keeping its shape, firm, not a liquid or gas, for example a rock SUN a star in our solar system that helps heat the earth and keeps plants alive
- salt
- A common substance recognised chemically as sodium chloride (NaCl), used extensively as a condiment and preservative
- salt
- the taste experience when salt is taken into the mouth
- salt
- 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
- salt
- That which preserves from corruption or error; that which purifies; a corrective; an antiseptic; also, an allowance or deduction; as, his statements must be taken with a grain of salt
- salt
- The neutral compound formed by the union of an acid and a base; thus, sulphuric acid and iron form the salt sulphate of iron or green vitriol
- salt
- When you salt food, you add salt to it. Salt the stock to your taste and leave it simmering very gently. + salted salt·ed Put a pan of salted water on to boil
- salt
- any compound formed by combination of any negative ion (except hydroxide) with any positive ion (except hydrogen or hydronium); the precipitate produced as the result of neutralization of an acid with a base
- salt
- Salacious; lecherous; lustful
- salt
- Sesame Seed Shortening Short Paste Silicone Paper Sodium Stearoyl-2-Lactylate (SSL) Specific Gravity Specific Heat Specific Volume Spring Wheat Sterilisation Sugar Batter Cake Mixing Method Surfactant Syneresis Thiamine Titanium Dioxide Triglyceride Unleavened Bread Viscoelasticity Vitamins Water Water Activity Waxy Maize Winter Wheat Yeast
- salt
- Salt is a strong-tasting substance, in the form of white powder or crystals, which is used to improve the flavour of food or to preserve it. Salt occurs naturally in sea water. Season lightly with salt and pepper. a pinch of salt
- salt
- Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
- salt
- The chloride of sodium, a substance used for seasoning food, for the preservation of meat, etc
- salt
- {s} salty, having the flavor of salt; containing salt; preserved with salt; bitter, piquant, sharp
- salt
- the taste experience when salt is taken into the mouth white crystalline form of especially sodium chloride used to season and preserve food a compound formed by replacing hydrogen in an acid by a metal (or a radical that acts like a metal) preserve with salt; "people used to salt meats on ships"
- salt
- A compound produced by the combination of a base, commonly a metallic oxide, with an acid; some common salts are sodium chloride, potassium chloride, and magnesium sulfate
- salt
- add zest or liveliness to; "She salts her lectures with jokes"
- salt
- sprinkle as if with salt; "the rebels had salted the fields with mines and traps"
- salt
- The act of leaping or jumping; a leap
- salt
- containing or filled with salt; "salt water
- salt
- To sprinkle, impregnate, or season with salt; to preserve with salt or in brine; to supply with salt; as, to salt fish, beef, or pork; to salt cattle
- salt
- Hence, flavor; taste; savor; smack; seasoning
- salt
- (1) The mineral sodium chloride
- salt
- To fill with salt between the timbers and planks, as a ship, for the preservation of the timber
- salt
- To deposit salt as a saline solution; as, the brine begins to salt
- salt
- A white, friable mineral that is highly soluble in water
- salt
- The common name for sodium chloride, or table salt In brewing terms, any compound produced by the reaction of an acid with an alkali
- salt
- a compound formed by replacing hydrogen in an acid by a metal (or a radical that acts like a metal)
- salt
- The common name for the specific chemical compound sodium chloride, used in the regeneration of ion exchange water softeners In chemistry, the term is applied to a class of chemical compounds which can be formed by the neutralization of an acid with a base
- salt
- A chemical compound formed by combining the anion of an acid with the cation of a base Second Law of Thermodynamics - Some forms of transformations of one kind of energy to another are not observed to occur in natural processes The observed transformations in a closed system are always characterized by a nondecreasing entropy In open systems where the entropy may be kept constant, the allowed transformations are always characterized by a decrease in the amount of (free) energy available to do useful work
- salt
- Any mineral salt used as an aperient or cathartic, especially Epsom salts, Rochelle salt, or Glauber's salt
- salt
- A chemical compound derived from an acid by replacing the hydrogen atom with a metal or positive ion Salts may act as buffers in solution with acids or bases Common or table salt (NaCl) is an example
- salt
- BATHS - Crystals are soaked in a bath of course salt and luke warm water overnight or during the day Sometimes this is accompanied by leaving the stones in the sun or moonlight
- salt
- Overflowed with, or growing in, salt water; as, a salt marsh; salt grass
- salt
- 1 Sodium chloride, NaCl, used for preserving the freshness of food 2 Substance that results from reaction between acid and base
- salt
- containing or filled with salt; "salt water"
- salt
- A random value concatenated to a symmetric cipher key to foil precomputation attacks by generating different results each time the encryption is performed The salt value is typically sent with the encrypted message so the recipient can reproduce the complete decryption key
- salt
- If you say, for example, that any doctor worth his or her salt would do something, you mean that any doctor who was good at his or her job or who deserved respect would do it. Any coach worth his salt would do exactly as I did
- salt
- of speech that is painful or bitter; "salt scorn"- Shakespeare; "a salt apology"
- salt
- 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
- an ionic compound
- salt
- A string of random (or pseudorandom) bits concatenated with a key or password to foil precomputation attacks
- salt
- {i} sodium chloride, common crystalline mineral, table salt; element that provides zest or liveliness; experienced sailor; element that makes an expression poignant or caustic
- salt
- The common name for the specific chemical compound sodium chloride (NaCl), used in the regeneration of ion exchange water softeners In chemistry, the term is applied to a class of chemical compounds which can be formed by the neutralization of an acid with a base
- salt
- add salt to
- salt
- preserve with salt; "people used to salt meats on ships"
- salt
- If you take something with a pinch of salt, you do not believe that it is completely accurate or true. The more miraculous parts of this account should be taken with a pinch of salt
- salt
- {f} add salt, season with salt; preserve in salt; scatter salt; spice up, make lively; fraudulently place expensive minerals within a mine to make the mine appear valuable
- salt
- A basic taste characterized by solutions of chlorides, bromides, iodides, nitrates, and sulfates of potassium and lithium
- salt
- Salt was an important commodity and used for preserving meat See the entry for Salt in the main Alphabetic Section of Malcolm Bull's Trivia Trail and Red Hills, Salt-making, Saltern
- salt
- white crystalline form of especially sodium chloride used to season and preserve food
- salt
- A dish for salt at table; a saltcellar
- salt
- The common name for the specific chemical compound sodium chloride used in the regeneration of ion exchange water softeners In chemistry, the term is applied to a class of chemical compounds which can be formed by the neutralization of an acid with a base
- salt
- one of the four basic taste sensations; like the taste of sea water
- salt
- Salts are substances that are formed when an acid reacts with an alkali. The rock is rich in mineral salts. see also Epsom salts, smelling salts
- salt
- Fig
- salt
- A treaty between the US and former USSR limiting the number of ICBM and SLBM launchers that each can possess
- salt
- Hence, also, piquancy; wit; sense; as, Attic salt
- salt
- A compound formed when one or more of the hydrogen ions of an acid is replaced with an cation (metal or positive polyatomic ion) or when one or more of the hydroxide ions of a base is replaced with an anion (nonmetal or negative polyatomic ion )
- salt
- The mineral "sodium chloride " Most of today's salt comes from mines left by dried salt lakes Used as a flavoring agent in many foods Because of its value as a preservative, salt was a vital commodity to early civilization
- salt
- It is found native in the earth, and is also produced, by evaporation and crystallization, from sea water and other water impregnated with saline particles
- salt
- A string of random (or pseudo-random) bits concatenated with a key or password to foil precomputation attacks
- salt and pepper
- {s} with dark and light color mixed in small flecks; (of hair) gray and white
- salt and pepper
- {i} (Slang) marijuana
- salt and pepper shakers
- set of dispensers for salt and pepper (often made of ceramic or plastic)
- salt away money
- save money, conserve money
- salt cake
- unrefined form of sodium sulfate (used in the industry of glass, soap, paper pulp and ceramic glazes)
- salt cake
- Impure sodium sulfate used in making paper pulp, soaps and detergents, glass, ceramic glazes, and dyes
- salt cat
- {i} blend of salt and coarsely ground grain and lime that attracts pigeons
- salt cellar
- A salt cellar is a small container for salt with a hole or holes in the top for shaking salt onto food. a small container for salt American Equivalent: salt shaker (cellar from salliere, from salarium, from sal )
- salt cellar
- salt holder, vessel for serving salt
- salt cod
- codfish preserved in salt; must be desalted and flaked by soaking in water and pounding; used in e
- salt cod
- codfish cakes
- salt depletion
- loss of salt from the body without replacement (loss by vomiting or profuse perspiration or urination or diarrhea) thus upsetting the electrolyte balance
- salt dome
- An anticlinal fold with a columnar salt plug at its core. Largely subsurface geologic structure that consists of a vertical cylinder of salt embedded in horizontal or inclined strata. In the broadest sense, the term includes both the core of salt and the strata that surround and are "domed" by the core. Major accumulations of oil and natural gas are associated with salt domes in the U.S., Mexico, the North Sea, Germany, and Romania; domes along the Gulf Coast contain large quantities of sulfur. Salt domes are also major sources of salt and potash on the Gulf Coast and in Germany, and they have been used for underground storage of liquefied propane gas. Storage "bottles," made by drilling into the salt and then forming a cavity by subsequent solution, have been considered as sites for disposal of radioactive wastes
- salt flat
- a flat expanse of salt left by the evaporation of a body of salt water
- salt free
- {s} without salt, having no salt
- salt gland
- A specialized gland in marine animals that excretes the excess salt taken into the body
- salt glaze
- glaze that is produced by throwing salt into a kiln in the process of firing
- salt glow
- a hydrating & exfoliating treatment where small amounts of oil & coarse salt are applied to dampened skin
- salt glow
- The body is rubbed with coarse salt, sometimes in combination with fragrant oils, to remove the top layer of dead skin and stimulate circulation
- salt glow
- Coarse salt, often combined with fragrant oils, is rubbed into the body to exfoliate and stimulate circulation
- salt glow
- A hydrating and exfoliating treatment consisting of salt, essential oils and water This is followed by a shower and body lotion to complete the treatment
- salt glow
- An exfoliating treatment where the body is rubbed with coarse salt to remove the top layer of dead skin and stimulate circulation
- salt grass
- Any of various grasses, especially North American perennial plants of the genus Distichlis, that grow in salt marshes and alkaline areas
- salt horse
- (Slang) salted beef
- salt i
- the first treaty between the United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics resulting from the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
- salt ii
- the second treaty between the United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics resulting from the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
- salt junk
- salted pork or beef (Nautical Slang)
- salt lake city
- the capital and largest city of Utah; located near the Great Salt Lake in north central Utah; world capital of the Mormon Church
- salt lick
- block of salt that animals lick; location where animals go to lick salt and mineral deposits that are found in nature
- salt lick
- a salt deposit that animals regularly lick
- salt marsh
- salt swamp, wetland area containing salt water
- salt marsh
- A salt marsh is an area of flat, wet ground which is sometimes covered by salt water or contains areas of salt water. Low coastal grassland frequently overflowed by the tide
- salt marsh mallow
- subshrub of southeastern United States to New York
- salt mine
- mine from where salt is excavated; job that involves hard work and confinement (Slang)
- salt mine
- a mine where salt is dug
- salt of the earth
- {i} highly respected people, people of high morals
- salt out
- {f} separate from a solution by by adding salt, coagulate from a solution by adding salt
- salt pan
- {i} salt pool, small area of salt
- salt pork
- pork fat from taken from the belly or back or sides of a pig and cured with salt
- salt pork
- fat from the back and sides and belly of a hog carcass cured with salt
- salt pork
- Fatty pork that is cured with salt, often used as a flavoring
- salt prices
- inflate prices, raise prices unreasonably
- salt receipts
- falsify receipts, forge receipts
- salt reed grass
- tall reedlike grass common in salt meadows
- salt restricted diet
- nutritional diet that does not allow the consumption of salt
- salt rheum
- in the United States, for various cutaneous eruptions, particularly for those of eczema
- salt rheum
- A popular name, esp
- salt rush
- rush of the Pacific coast of North America
- salt shaker
- A salt shaker is the same as a salt cellar. a small container for salt British Equivalent: salt cellar
- salt shaker
- {i} container with small holes in the top for sprinkling salt, salt dispenser
- salt spoon
- {i} small spoon for taking salt at the table
- salt tree
- spiny shrub of the Caspian salt plains and Siberia having elegant silvery-downy young foliage and mildly fragrant pink-purple blooms
- salt truck
- a large vehicle that puts salt or sand on the roads in winter to make them less icy British Equivalent: gritter
- salt water
- Salt water is water from the sea, which has salt in it. fresh water
- salt water
- water containing salt, salty water, brine
- salt-cured
- (used especially of meats) preserved in salt
- salt-free margarine
- fatty spread which does not contain salt (used for baking, frying and spreading on food)
- salt-rising bread
- white wheat bread raised by a salt-tolerant bacterium in a mixture of salt and either cornmeal or potato pulp
- Attic salt
- Pointed and delicate wit
- Glaser's salt
- potassium sulphate
- Glauber's salt
- sodium sulphate decahydrate
- Rochelle salt
- The double salt potassium sodium tartrate that is used as a cathartic
- above the salt
- Of high standing or honor
- acid of salt
- hydrochloric acid
- bile salt
- The sodium salt of a bile acid; produced by the bile to neutralize the products leaving the stomach and to emulsify fatty material in it
- celery salt
- A spice ingredient used in cooking consisting of ground celery seed and salt
- chicken salt
- A seasoning comprising table salt blended with herbs, spices, flavourings, and sometimes monosodium glutamate, often containing chicken extracts
Chicken salt. That’s all it was. He wanted chicken salt and he got ordinary salt and so he whinged at me.”.
- common salt
- Ordinary salt (sodium chloride)
- covenant of salt
- A long-lasting agreement
- diazonium salt
- a diazonium compound
- double salt
- A solid solution of two simple salts, often in a definite proportion
- grain of salt
- A bit of common sense and skepticism. Generally used in some form of to take with a grain of salt
I'd take anything I read in that paper with a grain of salt.
- inner salt
- a zwitterion
- microcosmic salt
- A white salt, extracted from urine; once used in the preparation of phosphorus, and used in analytical tests for some metals; ammonium sodium hydrogenphosphate (NH4)NaHPO4
- organic salt
- Any salt of an organic acid
- organic salt
- table salt that has no additives
- pinch of salt
- Caution, doubt, consideration
Take anything he tells you with a pinch of salt, he's an inveterate liar and mixes truth with his fiction liberally.
- pinch of salt
- A small amount of salt
- pinches of salt
- plural form of pinch of salt
- rock salt
- The mineral halite
- rock salt
- Coarsely ground common salt
- rub salt in someone's wounds
- To make a painful situation even worse (even with the best of intentions)
John already feels guilty for what he did to you. Don't rub salt into his wounds.
- rub salt in the wound
- To make an injury feel worse
- sea salt
- salt prepared by evaporating sea water
- smelling salt
- Any material used in this way
- smelling salt
- ammonium carbonate, sometimes with added perfume, that is inhaled as a mild irritant to the mucous membranes, to help restore consciousness
- spirit of salt
- An old name of hydrochloric acid
- spirits of salt
- Hydrochloric acid
- sulfur salt
- salt with about 3% added sulfur; supplied in blocks as a feed supplement for cattle and sheep
- sulphur salt
- Alternative spelling of sulfur salt
- table salt
- Sodium chloride, the salt most commonly used to season food at the table, usually used to distinguish from other compounds recognized as salts by chemists
- take with a pinch of salt
- Not take entirely seriously
- worth one's salt
- Competent or adept
Any doctor worth his salt should be able to correctly diagnose the illness.
- worth one's weight in salt
- worth one's salt