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 | Jul 16, 2025This week’s theme Biblical idioms This week’s words Adam and Eve mess of pottage salt of the earth writing on the wall feet of clay     
Salt of the Earth, 1954
 Poster: Independent Productions             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg salt of the earth
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: A person or group considered to be among the finest of humanity.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
 From salt, from Old English sealt + earth, from Old English eorthe.
Earliest documented use: 1386.
 NOTES: 
In Matthew 5:13 Jesus gives the Sermon on the Mount and calls good,
moral people the salt of the earth. What’s so special about salt? Ask
someone who has to dine on food without salt. Or a marathoner running low
on electrolytes. Or someone needing to preserve food for a long winter or
sea voyage prior to the invention of refrigeration.
Roman soldiers got a special allowance for salt. That’s where we got the
word salary, from Latin sal (salt).  It’s a myth that they were actually
paid in salt.
 USAGE: 
“Jones’s thesis is that British writers, after centuries of patronizing
working-class people as ‘the salt of the earth’, now depict them only
as hooligans, if they write about them at all.” Deborah Friedell; Blighty; The New Yorker; Sep 12, 2011. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:Every student needs someone who says, simply, "You mean something. You
count." -Tony Kushner, playwright (b. 16 Jul 1956) | 
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