saut
See also: saût
French
Etymology
Pronunciation
Noun
saut m (plural sauts)
Derived terms
Derived terms
- saut à l'élastique
- saut à la perche (“pole vault”)
- saut en chute libre
- saut carpé
- saut à ski (“ski jump, ski jumping”)
- saut de l'ange (“swan dive”)
- saut de lapin (“bunny hop”)
- saut-de-loup (“(wide) ditch, haha; opening placed at ground level that allows natural light to illuminate a basement”)
- saut en hauteur (“high jump”)
- saut en longueur (“long jump”)
- triple saut (“triple jump”)
Related terms
- sauter (“to jump, leap; to bang, hump, have sex with”)
Further reading
- “saut” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Anagrams
Latgalian
Verb
saut
- to shoot
Scots
Etymology
From Old English sealt, from Proto-Germanic *saltą, from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂l-.
Pronunciation
Noun
saut (plural sauts)
- salt
- bitter consequences, retribution, smart, sharp, stinging words, sarcasm
Derived terms
Derived terms
- saut bree (“salt water”)
- saut-backet (“salt-box”)
- saut dish (“salt-cellar”)
- sauter (“a salter, a maker of salt, one who can do severe things”)
- sautie (“salty, tasting of salt”)
- sautie (“the common dab”)
- saut's sel (“salt itself, of food, etc.: excessively salted”)
- saut-watter (“the seaside”)
- wirth saut til his kail (“worth his salt”)
Verb
saut (third-person singular present sauts, present participle sautin, past sautit, past participle sautit)
- to preserve in salt, pickle, sprinkle with salt
- to punish, take revenge, snub, repress, treat severely
Tok Pisin
Etymology
Noun
saut
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