SALUTARY: "Producing a beneficial effect; promoting health"


"Salutary" is an adjective used to describe something that is beneficial, promoting health or well-being, or having a positive effect on one's character or behavior.

Etymology: The word "salutary" has its roots in Latin. It comes from the Latin word "salutaris," which is derived from "salus," meaning "health" or "well-being." The term evolved over time and was adopted into Middle English as "salutary," retaining its original sense of promoting health, well-being, or beneficial effects. In contemporary usage, "salutary" describes something that is conducive to good health, beneficial, or advantageous.

Sample Sentences:

  1. The exercise routine had a salutary impact on her overall fitness and energy levels.

  2. The doctor recommended a salutary diet to improve the patient's health.

  3. The criticism, though initially harsh, had a salutary effect on his work, prompting improvement.

  4. The new policies were implemented with the hope of bringing about salutary changes in the organization.

  5. The salutary advice from the mentor helped guide the student through challenging times.

Synonyms: healthful, beneficial, wholesome

Antonyms: harmful, unhealthy, detrimental


clipped from dictionary.reference.com
salutary \SAL-yuh-ter-ee\, adjective:
1. Producing or contributing to a beneficial effect; beneficial; advantageous.
2. Wholesome; healthful; promoting health.
Alexis de Tocqueville famously observed during his sojourn in this country that America was teeming with such associations -- charities, choral groups, church study groups, book clubs -- and that they had a remarkably salutary effect on society, turning selfish individuals into public-spirited citizens.
-- Fareed Zakaria, "Bigger Than the Family, Smaller Than the State",  New York Times, August 13, 1995
Surviving a near-death experience has the salutary effect of concentrating the mind.
-- Kenneth T. Walsh and Roger Simon, "Bush turns the tide",  U.S. News, February 28, 2000

And they washed it all down with sharp red wines, moderate amounts of which are known to be salutary.
-- Rod Usher, "The Fat of the Land",  Time Europe, January 8, 2000

Salutary derives from Latin salutaris, from salussalut-, "health."



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