A building or place where salt is made by boiling or by evaporation; salt works.
A large saltcellar formerly placed near the center of the table. The superior guests were seated above the saltfoot.
The European dab.
See Saltire.
A tribe of spiders including those which lie in wait and leap upon their prey; the leaping spiders; called also Salticidae.
One of the Saltigradae, a tribe of spiders which leap to seize their prey.
A mountebank; a quack.
The quality or state of containing salt; salt taste; as, the saltiness of sea water.
The act of sprinkling, impregnating, or furnishing, with salt.
A St. Andrew's cross, or cross in the form of an X, -- one of the honorable ordinaries.
In the manner of a saltire; -- said especially of the blazoning of a shield divided by two lines drawn in the direction of a bend and a bend sinister, and crossing at the center.
Somewhat salt.
Destitute of salt; insipid.
With taste of salt; in a salt manner.
A wide-mouthed bottle with glass stopper for holding chemicals, especially crystallized salts.
The quality or state of being salt, or impregnated with salt; salt taste; as, the saltness of sea water. In the sense of having salt content, saltiness is more commonly used.
Potassium nitrate; niter; a white crystalline substance, KNO3, having a cooling saline taste, obtained by leaching from certain soils in which it is produced by the process of nitrification (see Nitrification, 2). It is a strong oxidizer, is the chief constituent of gunpowder, and is also used as an antiseptic in curing meat, and in medicine as a diuretic, diaphoretic, and refrigerant.
Pertaining to saltpeter, or partaking of its qualities; impregnated with saltpeter.
A name given to several plants which grow on the seashore, as the Batis maritima, and the glasswort. See Glasswort.
Containing salt; tasting of salt; saltish; as, the salty sea; the potatoes are too salty.
Favorable to health; healthful; promoting health; as, salubrious air, water, or climate.
The quality of being salubrious; favorableness to the preservation of health; salubriousness; wholesomeness; healthfulness; as, the salubrity of the air, of a country, or a climate.
To salute.
Wholesome; healthful; promoting health; as, salutary exercise.
The act of saluting, or paying respect or reverence, by the customary words or actions; the act of greeting, or expressing good will or courtesy; also, that which is uttered or done in saluting or greeting.
The student who pronounces the salutatory oration at the annual Commencement or like exercises of a college, -- an honor commonly assigned to that member of the graduating class who ranks second in scholarship.
By way of salutation.
A place for saluting or greeting; a vestibule; a porch.
The act of saluting, or expressing kind wishes or respect; salutation; greeting.
One who salutes.
Bringing health; healthy; salutary; beneficial; as, salutiferous air.
Salutarily.
The quality or condition of being salvable; salvableness.
Capable of being saved; admitting of salvation.
Savage.
The act of saving; preservation or deliverance from destruction, danger, or great calamity.
An evangelist, a member, or a recruit, of the Salvation Army.
A place where things are preserved; a repository.
To save, as a ship or goods, from the perils of the sea.
A tray or waiter on which anything is presented.
Tubular, with a spreading border. See Hypocraterimorphous.
A genus of plants including the sage. See Sage.
Tending to save or secure safety.
A concentrated fire from pieces of artillery, as in endeavoring to make a break in a fortification; a volley.
One who assists in saving a ship or goods at sea, without being under special obligation to do so.
Together.
a Surface to Air Missile.
A society or congregation; a church or religious body.
A society; a congregation, a worshiping assembly, or church, esp. of the Brahmo-somaj.
A dry, indehiscent, usually one-seeded, winged fruit, as that of the ash, maple, and elm; a key or key fruit.
See Simar.
Of or pertaining to Samaria, in Palestine. A native or inhabitant of Samaria; also, the language of Samaria.
A rare metallic element of doubtful identity.
Resembling a samara, or winged seed vessel.
See Simar.
A rare mineral having a velvet-black color and submetallic luster. It is a niobate of uranium, iron, and the yttrium and cerium metals.
A colloquial or humorous appellation for a negro; sometimes, the offspring of a black person and a mulatto; a zambo.
Same as Sambur.
A genus of shrubs and trees; the elder.
An ancient stringed instrument used by the Greeks, the particular construction of which is unknown.
An East Indian deer (Rusa Aristotelis) having a mane on its neck. Its antlers have but three prongs. Called also gerow. The name is applied to other species of the genus Rusa, as the Bornean sambur (Rusa equina).
Not different or other; not another or others; identical; unchanged.
Sameness, 2.
The state of being the same; identity; absence of difference; near resemblance; correspondence; similarity; as, a sameness of person, of manner, of sound, of appearance, and the like.
See Samite.
A native or inhabitant of Samos.
A hot and destructive wind that sometimes blows, in Turkey, from the desert. It is identical with the simoom of Arabia and the kamsin of Syria.
Samian.
A Japanese musical instrument with three strings, resembling a guitar or banjo.
A species of silk stuff, or taffeta, generally interwoven with gold.
The parr.
A machine for pressing the water from skins in tanning.
Of or pertaining to the Samoan Islands (formerly called Navigators' Islands) in the South Pacific Ocean, or their inhabitants. An inhabitant of the Samoan Islands.
A metal urn used in Russia for making tea. It is filled with water, which is heated by charcoal placed in a pipe, with chimney attached, which passes through the urn.
An ignorant and degraded Turanian tribe which occupies a portion of Northern Russia and a part of Siberia.
An article of food consisting of maize broken or bruised, which is cooked by boiling, and usually eaten with milk; coarse hominy.
A Chinese boat from twelve to fifteen feet long, covered with a house, and sometimes used as a permanent habitation on the inland waters.
A fleshy, suffrutescent, umbelliferous European plant (Crithmum maritimum). It grows among rocks and on cliffs along the seacoast, and is used for pickles.
To make or show something similar to; to match.
One who makes up samples for inspection; one who examines samples, or by samples; as, a wool sampler.
A spirituous liquor distilled by the Chinese from the yeasty liquor in which boiled rice has fermented under pressure.
An Israelite of Bible record (see Judges xiii.), distinguished for his great strength; hence, a man of extraordinary physical strength.
In the former feudal system of Japan, the class or a member of the class, of military retainers of the daimios, constituting the gentry or lesser nobility. They possessed power of life and death over the commoners, and wore two swords as their distinguishing mark. Their special rights and privileges were abolished with the fall of feudalism in 1871. They were referred to as /a cross between a knight and a gentleman/.
The quality or state of being sanable; sanableness; curableness.
Capable of being healed or cured; susceptible of remedy.
The quality of being sanable.
The act of healing or curing.
Having the power to cure or heal; healing; tending to heal; sanatory.
An establishment for the treatment of the sick; a resort for invalids. See Sanitarium.
Conducive to health; tending to cure; healing; curative; sanative.
Anciently, a sackcloth coat worn by penitents on being reconciled to the church.
The nine of trumps in sancho pedro.
See Sanctus bell, under Sanctus.
To sanctify.
The act of sanctifying or making holy; the state of being sanctified or made holy; the act of God's grace by which the affections of men are purified, or alienated from sin and the world, and exalted to a supreme love to God; also, the state of being thus purified or sanctified.
Made holy; also, made to have the air of sanctity; sanctimonious.
One who sanctifies, or makes holy; specifically, the Holy Spirit.
To make sacred or holy; to set apart to a holy or religious use; to consecrate by appropriate rites; to hallow.
In a manner or degree tending to sanctify or make holy.
Discoursing on heavenly or holy things, or in a holy manner.
Sanctimonious.
Possessing sanctimony; holy; sacred; saintly.
Holiness; devoutness; scrupulous austerity; sanctity; especially, outward or artificial saintliness; assumed or pretended holiness; hypocritical devoutness.
To give sanction to; to ratify; to confirm; to approve.
Of, pertaining to, or giving, sanction.
Holiness; sacredness; sanctity.
The state or quality of being sacred or holy; holiness; saintliness; moral purity; godliness.
To shelter by means of a sanctuary or sacred privileges.
A sacred place; a consecrated spot; a holy and inviolable site. The most retired part of the temple at Jerusalem, called the Holy of Holies, in which was kept the ark of the covenant, and into which no person was permitted to enter except the high priest, and he only once a year, to intercede for the people; also, the most sacred part of the tabernacle; also, the temple at Jerusalem. The most sacred part of any religious building, esp. that part of a Christian church in which the altar is placed. A house consecrated to the worship of God; a place where divine service is performed; a church, temple, or other place of worship. A sacred and inviolable asylum; a place of refuge and protection; shelter; refuge; protection.
A sacred place; hence, a place of retreat; a room reserved for personal use; as, an editor's sanctum.
A part of the Mass, or, in Protestant churches, a part of the communion service, of which the first words in Latin are Sanctus, sanctus, sanctus [Holy, holy, holy]; -- called also Tersanctus.
To sprinkle or cover with sand.
Having defective sight; dim-sighted; purblind.
Lit., of or pert. to a lot or piece of sandy ground, -- hence, pert. to, or characteristic of, the policy or practices of the socialistic or communistic followers of the Irish agitator Denis Kearney, who delivered many of his speeches in the open sand lots about San Francisco; as, the sand-lot constitution of California, framed in 1879, under the influence of sand-lot agitation.
A kind of shoe consisting of a sole strapped to the foot; a protection for the foot, covering its lower surface, but not its upper. A kind of slipper. An overshoe with parallel openings across the instep.
Wearing sandals.
Shaped like a sandal or slipper.
The highly perfumed yellowish heartwood of an East Indian and Polynesian tree (Santalum album), and of several other trees of the same genus, as the Hawaiian Santalum Freycinetianum and Santalum pyrularium, the Australian Santalum latifolium, etc. The name is extended to several other kinds of fragrant wood. Any tree of the genus Santalum, or a tree which yields sandalwood. The red wood of a kind of buckthorn, used in Russia for dyeing leather (Rhamnus Dahuricus).
Realgar; red sulphide of arsenic.
To treat harshly or unfairly.
An assaulter whose weapon is a sand bag. See Sand bag, under Sand.