salutare

Etymology 1
From.

Adjective

 * 1) healthy, wholesome, beneficial

Etymology 2
From.

Verb

 * 1)  to welcome, to greet, to salute
 * 2)  to see off, to say goodbye
 * 3)  to give somebody's regards to somebody, remember somebody to somebody
 * 1)  to give somebody's regards to somebody, remember somebody to somebody
 * 1)  to give somebody's regards to somebody, remember somebody to somebody

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1)  salvation, saviour, deliverance
 * 2) * 4th century A.D., St. Jerome, Vulgate, Psalm 118:166,174"la"

- Exspectabam salutare tuum, Domine, et mandata tua dilexi...Concupivi salutare tuum, Domine, et lex tua meditatio mea est.


 * 1) * 4th century A.D., St. Jerome, Vulgate, Acts of the Apostles 28:28"la"

- Notum ergo sit vobis, quoniam gentibus missum est hoc salutare Dei, et ipsi audient.


 * 1) * 4th century A.D., St. Jerome, Vulgate, Deuteronomy, 32:15"la"

- Incrassatus est dilectus, et recalcitravit : incrassatus, impinguatus, dilatatus, dereliquit Deum factorem suum, et recessit a Deo salutari suo.


 * 1) safety, security
 * 2) health, welfare, prosperity

Usage notes

 * The substantive form of the adjective salutare was adopted by St. Jerome as a noun dozens of times throughout the Vulgate Bible to convey the Christian religious concept of salvation in addition to its general meaning of "safety", interchangeable in meaning with the preferred Classical Latin noun salus.

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) salutation