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salty
[ sawl-tee ]
adjective
- racy or coarse:
salty humor.
- of the sea, sailing, or life at sea:
salty tales of adventure on the high seas.
- Slang. (especially of a sailor) toughened by experience:
proud and salty Marines.
- Slang. angry, upset, or hostile, especially due to embarrassment or failure:
He gets all salty whenever he loses.
salty
/ ˈsɔːltɪ /
adjective
- of, tasting of, or containing salt
- (esp of humour) sharp; piquant
- relating to life at sea
Derived Forms
- ˈsaltily, adverb
- ˈsaltiness, noun
Other Words From
- salti·ly adverb
- salti·ness noun
- over·salty adjective
- un·salty adjective
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
In desalination, seawater is filtered through a membrane that removes salts, leaving fresh water and a salty brine.
“It’s salty. But it’s really not that nice.”
Ample coverage of a rally in Pennsylvania this week might suggest that his salty discourse has hit new lows.
There is seasonal vegetables, seasonal fish, seasonal meat and two different types of aging, fish and meat, with citrus-y, bitter, salty, umami, spicy and sour flavors.
As I stroll along the shore, I’m hit by a mix of salty sea air mingles and the scent of coconut sunblock a beachgoer is applying.
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About This Word
What else does salty mean?
Where does salty come from?
The term salty has a long history of slang meanings, probably because of its association with sailors. In the 1860s, salty was a synonym for “racy” or “vulgar,” also a likely connection to (the popular reputation of) sailors.
By the 1920s–30s, salty is recorded in Black English as jump salty, meaning to become suddenly angry. The phrase jump salty stuck around well into the 1960s.
Owing in part to the influence of Black English on popular culture, salty has spread in the mainstream vernacular as a slang term for “bitter” and “upset,” e.g., He was salty I didn’t invite him to the party.
How is salty used in real life?
People who use the slang version of salty often use it to describe someone who is bitter or reacting sourly (emotions love taste metaphors) to something that made them upset—say, losing in a video game. And speaking of losing, slang terms or expressions that have a similar sense to salty include sore loser and butthurt.
Meghan McCain is just salty about Obama because somewhere in a closet she has a "first daughter" tiara that because of him she never got to wear it in public https://t.co/Bjv8kB0CtV
— Oliver Willis (@owillis) May 19, 2020
Don’t be salty with the results you didn’t get from the work you didn’t do
— 7 STREAMS OF INCOME (@aveclassse) May 12, 2020
Note
This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the term’s history, meaning, and usage.
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