See also: Salgado

Galician edit

Etymology edit

From Old Galician-Portuguese salgado, from Vulgar Latin *salicare (to salt), from Latin sāl (salt), from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂l-.

Pronunciation edit

 
  • IPA(key): (standard) /salˈɡado/ [s̺ɑɫˈɣ̞ɑ.ð̞ʊ]
  • IPA(key): (gheada) /salˈħado/ [s̺ɑɫˈħɑ.ð̞ʊ]

  • Rhymes: -ado
  • Hyphenation: sal‧ga‧do

Participle edit

salgado (feminine salgada, masculine plural salgados, feminine plural salgadas)

  1. past participle of salgar

Adjective edit

salgado (feminine salgada, masculine plural salgados, feminine plural salgadas)

  1. salty
  2. salted

Portuguese edit

Etymology edit

From Old Galician-Portuguese salgado, from Vulgar Latin *salicāre (to salt), from Latin sāl (salt), from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂l-.

Pronunciation edit

 
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /sawˈɡa.du/ [saʊ̯ˈɡa.du]
    • (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /sawˈɡa.do/ [saʊ̯ˈɡa.do]

Adjective edit

salgado (feminine salgada, masculine plural salgados, feminine plural salgadas)

  1. salty
    1. tasting of salt
    2. salted (containing salt)
    3. preserved or treated with salt
      Synonym: ensalmourado
    4. savory; nonsweet
      Antonym: doce
    5. (figurative, of language) coarse, provocative, earthy
      Synonym: malicioso
  2. (colloquial) very expensive
    Synonym: caríssimo
    Antonyms: barato, em conta
    preço salgado
    high price

Related terms edit

Noun edit

 
salgados

salgado m (plural salgados)

  1. any snack, usually fried, that takes salt
    Synonym: salgadinho
    Antonym: doce

Participle edit

salgado (feminine salgada, masculine plural salgados, feminine plural salgadas)


  1. past participle of salgar

Quotations edit

For quotations using this term, see Citations:salgado.

See also edit

Basic tastes in Portuguese · sabores (layout · text)
           
doce azedo salgado amargo picante umami