SALT - meaning and definition. What is SALT
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What (who) is SALT - definition

TWO ROUNDS OF BILATERAL CONFERENCES AND CORRESPONDING INTERNATIONAL TREATIES INVOLVING THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOVIET UNION
SALT I treaty; SALT I; SALT II; SALT; SALT I Treaty; SALT treaties; SALT-2; SALT Talks; Salt 1; Nuclear arms reduction; Salt I; Salt II; Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty II; SALT negotiations; Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty; Strategic Arms Limitation Treaties; SALT talks; SALT treaty
  • [[Jimmy Carter]] and [[Leonid Brezhnev]] signing the SALT II treaty, June 18, 1979, at the [[Hofburg Palace]], in Vienna

salt         
  • Golmud salt evaporation pans at [[Golmud]], August 1993
  • Bolivian rose salt from Andes
  • Bamyan]], [[Afghanistan]]
  • Comparison of table salt with [[kitchen salt]]. Shows a typical salt shaker and salt bowl with salt spread before each on a black background.
  • [[Halite]] (rock salt) from the [[Wieliczka salt mine]], Małopolskie, Poland
  • [[Himalayan salt]] is [[halite]] with a distinct pink color.
  • evaporation pond]] in [[Walvis Bay]], [[Namibia]]; [[halophile]] organisms give it a red colour.
  • [[Bread and salt]] at a Russian wedding ceremony
  • pre-Inca times]]
  • Salt production in [[Halle, Saxony-Anhalt]] (1670)
  • Irregular crystals of [[sea salt]]
  • Sea salt [[evaporation pond]] at [[Walvis Bay]]. [[Halophile]] organisms impart a red colour.
  • SEM]] image of a grain of table salt
MINERAL USED AS FOOD INGREDIENT, COMPOSED PRIMARILY OF SODIUM CHLORIDE
Common salt; Table salt; Salt production; Table Salt; Normal salt; Salt (food); Salt crystals; Salt crystal; Edible salt; Refined salt; Saltmaking; Dietary salt; Salt refining; Refining salt; Manufacture of salt; Salt industry; Salt making; The salt industry; Culinary salt
(salts, salting, salted)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
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.
N-UNCOUNT
2.
When you salt food, you add salt to it.
Salt the stock to your taste and leave it simmering very gently.
VERB: V n
salted
Put a pan of salted water on to boil.
ADJ: usu ADJ n
3.
Salts are substances that are formed when an acid reacts with an alkali.
The rock is rich in mineral salts.
N-COUNT: usu pl
4.
5.
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.
PHRASE: V inflects
6.
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.
PHRASE: n PHR
7.
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.
PHRASE: V and wound inflect
SALT         
  • Golmud salt evaporation pans at [[Golmud]], August 1993
  • Bolivian rose salt from Andes
  • Bamyan]], [[Afghanistan]]
  • Comparison of table salt with [[kitchen salt]]. Shows a typical salt shaker and salt bowl with salt spread before each on a black background.
  • [[Halite]] (rock salt) from the [[Wieliczka salt mine]], Małopolskie, Poland
  • [[Himalayan salt]] is [[halite]] with a distinct pink color.
  • evaporation pond]] in [[Walvis Bay]], [[Namibia]]; [[halophile]] organisms give it a red colour.
  • [[Bread and salt]] at a Russian wedding ceremony
  • pre-Inca times]]
  • Salt production in [[Halle, Saxony-Anhalt]] (1670)
  • Irregular crystals of [[sea salt]]
  • Sea salt [[evaporation pond]] at [[Walvis Bay]]. [[Halophile]] organisms impart a red colour.
  • SEM]] image of a grain of table salt
MINERAL USED AS FOOD INGREDIENT, COMPOSED PRIMARILY OF SODIUM CHLORIDE
Common salt; Table salt; Salt production; Table Salt; Normal salt; Salt (food); Salt crystals; Salt crystal; Edible salt; Refined salt; Saltmaking; Dietary salt; Salt refining; Refining salt; Manufacture of salt; Salt industry; Salt making; The salt industry; Culinary salt
1. Symbolic Assembly Language Trainer. Assembly-like language implemented in BASIC by Kevin Stock, now at Encore in France. 2. Sam And Lincoln Threaded language. A threaded extensible variant of BASIC. "SALT", S.D. Fenster et al, BYTE (Jun 1985) p.147. [Jargon File]
SALT         
  • Golmud salt evaporation pans at [[Golmud]], August 1993
  • Bolivian rose salt from Andes
  • Bamyan]], [[Afghanistan]]
  • Comparison of table salt with [[kitchen salt]]. Shows a typical salt shaker and salt bowl with salt spread before each on a black background.
  • [[Halite]] (rock salt) from the [[Wieliczka salt mine]], Małopolskie, Poland
  • [[Himalayan salt]] is [[halite]] with a distinct pink color.
  • evaporation pond]] in [[Walvis Bay]], [[Namibia]]; [[halophile]] organisms give it a red colour.
  • [[Bread and salt]] at a Russian wedding ceremony
  • pre-Inca times]]
  • Salt production in [[Halle, Saxony-Anhalt]] (1670)
  • Irregular crystals of [[sea salt]]
  • Sea salt [[evaporation pond]] at [[Walvis Bay]]. [[Halophile]] organisms impart a red colour.
  • SEM]] image of a grain of table salt
MINERAL USED AS FOOD INGREDIENT, COMPOSED PRIMARILY OF SODIUM CHLORIDE
Common salt; Table salt; Salt production; Table Salt; Normal salt; Salt (food); Salt crystals; Salt crystal; Edible salt; Refined salt; Saltmaking; Dietary salt; Salt refining; Refining salt; Manufacture of salt; Salt industry; Salt making; The salt industry; Culinary salt
Script Application Language for Telix

Wikipedia

Strategic Arms Limitation Talks

The Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) were two rounds of bilateral conferences and corresponding international treaties involving the United States and the Soviet Union. The Cold War superpowers dealt with arms control in two rounds of talks and agreements: SALT I and SALT II.

Negotiations commenced in Helsinki, in November 1969. SALT I led to the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and an interim agreement between the two countries.

Although SALT II resulted in an agreement in 1979 in Vienna, the US Senate chose not to ratify the treaty in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, which took place later that year. The Supreme Soviet did not ratify it either. The agreement expired on December 31, 1985, and was not renewed, although both sides continued to respect it.

The talks led to the STARTs, or Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties, which consisted of START I, a 1991 completed agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union, and START II, a 1993 agreement between the United States and Russia which never entered into effect, both of which proposed limits on multiple-warhead capacities and other restrictions on each side's number of nuclear weapons. A successor to START I, New START, was proposed and was eventually ratified in February 2011.

Examples of use of SALT
1. The shortage could force cities to salt fewer roads, while other communities are abandoning road salt for less–expensive but also less–effective sand or sand–salt blends.
2. Aside from its Hapoalim stake, Salt Industries also produces ... surprise, salt.
3. Salt producing companies criticized the government ban on the import of salt.
4. Every eight miles we‘d pop salt to keep up a proper salt–to–water equilibrium.
5. The highest turnover of the day yesterday was in Israel Salt Industries (TASE: SALT) stock.