sallet

[ sal-it ]

nounArmor.
  1. a light medieval helmet, usually with a vision slit or a movable visor.

Origin of sallet

1
1400–50; late Middle English, variant of salade<Middle French <Spanish celada (or Italian celata) <Latin caelāta (cassis) engraved (helmet), feminine of caelātus (past participle of caelāre to engrave); see -ate1

Words Nearby sallet

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How to use sallet in a sentence

  • What variety of herbs soever are shufed together in the dish, yet the whole mass is swallowed up under one name of a sallet.

    The Essays of Montaigne, Complete | Michel de Montaigne
  • Galen (whoſe beloved sallet it was) from its pinguid, ſubdulcid and agreeable Nature, ſays it breeds the moſt laudable Blood.

  • During the fourteenth century a new kind of helmet arose, called in England the "sallad," or "sallet."

    A Complete Guide to Heraldry | Arthur Charles Fox-Davies
  • It quite frightened her, not knowing that Unity sallet was in the waggon likewise.

    Life's Little Ironies | Thomas Hardy
  • Unity sallet is there too—yes, at the other end, under the tarpaulin.

    Life's Little Ironies | Thomas Hardy

British Dictionary definitions for sallet

sallet

salet salade

/ (ˈsælɪt) /


noun
  1. a light round helmet extending over the back of the neck; replaced the basinet in the 15th century

Origin of sallet

1
C15: from French salade, probably from Old Italian celata, from celare to conceal, from Latin

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012