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Synonyms

salad

American  
[sal-uhd] / ˈsæl əd /

noun

  1. a usually cold dish consisting of vegetables, as lettuce, tomatoes, and cucumbers, covered with a dressing and sometimes containing seafood, meat, or eggs.

  2. any of various dishes consisting of foods, as meat, seafood, eggs, pasta, or fruit, prepared singly or combined, usually cut up, mixed with a dressing, and served cold.

    chicken salad; potato salad.

  3. any herb or green vegetable, as lettuce, used for salads or eaten raw.

  4. South Midland and Southern U.S. greens.

  5. any mixture or assortment.

    The usual salad of writers, artists, and musicians attended the party.


salad British  
/ ˈsæləd /

noun

  1. a dish of raw vegetables, such as lettuce, tomatoes, etc, served as a separate course with cold meat, eggs, etc, or as part of a main course

  2. any dish of cold vegetables or fruit

    potato salad

    fruit salad

  3. any green vegetable used in such a dish, esp lettuce

"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

Etymology

Origin of salad

1350–1400; Middle English salad ( e ) < Middle French salade < Old Provençal salada < Vulgar Latin *salāta, feminine past participle of *salāre to salt, equivalent to sal-, stem of sāl salt 1 + -āta -ate 1

Explanation

A salad is a dish that's usually cold and often includes lettuce or other greens. However, some salads don't have any greens but instead have lots of mayo — like tuna salad or chicken salad. While your idea of a salad might be iceberg lettuce, tomatoes, carrots, croutons, and a creamy dressing, salads come in many different forms. You can make a pasta salad or a tuna salad or an egg salad. Other salads are based on big pieces of bread, or meat, or cheese — and still others are dessert salads made with gelatin or whipped cream and fruit. Salad comes from the Latin phrase herba salata, or "salted vegetables."

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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

One is a thick cut of bacon with salad, the other smoked chicken and coleslaw.

From BBC • May 15, 2026

Search for fibermaxxing on social media and you’ll see any number of recipes for chia pudding and bean salad, as well as influencers talking up the benefits of a high-fiber diet.

From MarketWatch • May 10, 2026

On the train back to Chicago, I eat a beet-and-pickled-grape salad and reply to my husband’s texts about Salmon’s day.

From Slate • May 10, 2026

The Order: The open-face bagel sandwich with whitefish salad, mustard, pickled peppers and dill combines classic flavors with contemporary style.

From The Wall Street Journal • May 9, 2026

Mama gives me an Are you sure you can eat all that? look and orders a salad for herself.

From "A Place at the Table" by Saadia Faruqi and Laura Shovan

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