salten
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English salten, from Old English sealten, from Proto-Germanic *saltanaz (“salted”), past participle of *saltaną (“to salt”), equivalent to salt + -en. Cognate with Saterland Frisian soalten (“salted; salty”), German Low German solten (“salted”), Dutch gezouten (“salted”), German gesalzen (“salted”).
Adjective
salten (comparative more salten, superlative most salten)
- (rare) salted; salty
- a salten marsh
- 1984, Charles S. Peterson, Utah: A History - Page 14:
- Rumored as early as 1688, when Baron Lahontan told of a salten sea 300 leagues in circumference, and reported but unseen by Escalante, the Great Salt Lake became the region's chief distinguishing feature.
- 1991, Lance Williams, Tillman S. Boxell, Arnold Sundgaard, Promised Valley: The Novel - Page 196:
- "Discovered by my old friend Jedediah Smith. One beaver season he come down out of the mountains and saw this marsh land with reeds twenty feet high. ... But o' course it was a great big salten lake. Captain Stansbury went all around it.
- 2011, G. Maroulis, T. Bancewicz, B. Champagne, Atomic and Molecular Nonlinear Optics:
- The pseudo-centrosymmetric electronic environment of the [FeIII(salten)] core and the absence of strong donor acceptor character on the salten fragment leads to the suggestion (eventually verified by ZINDO) that the metal center is not involved in the dominant charge transfer process, which is located on the DEAS and mepepy moieties.
Verb
salten (third-person singular simple present saltens, present participle saltening, simple past and past participle saltened)
- (transitive, intransitive) To make or become salty or salted
- 1999, Journal of Physical Oceanography, volume 29, page 2278:
- It might, however, give more credit to the thermohaline structure in the Atlantic: the large influx of thermocline water saltens the surface layer, while a fresh subsurface layer might be generated by the salt export at intermediate depths.
- 2014, Ernest R. Pope, Munich Playground:
- As Hitler raged on for one hour and thirteen minutes, an ever-increasing number of women and girls burst into tears, some of which saltened the beer mugs that had been lubricating their laughter a few minutes ago, before Festival officials turned on the loudspeakers.
-
Asturian
Catalan
Middle English
Etymology
From Old English sealtan, from Proto-Germanic *saltaną, from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂l-; equivalent to salt + -en.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsaltən/
Verb
salten
- To salt food; to sprinkle with salt for flavour.
- To use salt to aid the preservation or keeping of food.
- (rare) To apply salt to the body for medicinal reasons.
- (rare) To apply salt to open wounds as a method of torture.
Conjugation
Conjugation of salten (strong class 7/irregular weak)
infinitive | (to) salten | |
---|---|---|
indicative | present | past |
1st person singular | salte | *selt, *sult, *salted |
2nd person singular | saltest | *selt, *sult, *seltest |
3rd person singular | salteþ, salteth | *selt, *sult, *salted |
plural | salten | selt(en), salted(en) |
subjunctive | present | past |
singular | salte | *selte, *sulte |
plural | salten | selt(en), salted(en) |
imperative | present | |
singular | salte | |
plural | salteþ, salteth | |
participle | present | past |
saltende, saltinge | salt(en), (i)selt, (i)sult |
References
- “salten (v.)” in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-10-26.
Spanish
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.