| Links | |
|---|---|
| etymological origin of | ang: sieltan |
| etymological origin of | eng: salt |
| has derived form | ang: gesieltan |
| has derived form | ang: sealtbrōc |
| has derived form | ang: sealtere |
| has derived form | ang: sealtern |
| has derived form | ang: sealtfæt |
| has derived form | ang: sealthalgung |
| has derived form | ang: sealtherpæþ |
| has derived form | ang: sealthus |
| has derived form | ang: sealtleah |
| has derived form | ang: sealtleap |
| has derived form | ang: sealtnes |
| has derived form | ang: sealtsæleþa |
| has derived form | ang: sealtseaþ |
| has derived form | ang: sealtstan |
| has derived form | ang: sealtstræt |
| has derived form | ang: sealtwic |
| has derived form | ang: sealtwielle |
| has derived form | ang: sealtyþ |
| has derived form | ang: sieltan |
| is derived from | ang: gesieltan |
| lexical category | adjective |
| lexical category | noun |
| pronunciation | /sæalt/ |
| semantically related | ang: rēam |
| semantically related | ang: ream |
| semantically related | ang: teru |
| translation | eng: salt |
| translation | eng: salted |
| translation | eng: salty |
Lexvo © 2008-2025 Gerard de Melo. Contact Legal Information / Imprint