| Halo-Salt Words: euhalline to stenohalinehalio-, hali- (Greek > Latin: sea or ocean; salt)Dont confuse this halo-, hal- with another hal- [Latin] that means breathe, breath. euhaline: A reference to waters containing between 30 and 40 parts per thousand of dissolved salts; that is, in most cases, normal sea water.
 euryhaline: Able to tolerate a wide range of salinity; said of organisms capable of withstanding widely varying concentrations of salt in the environment.
 halic: Pertaining to saline conditions.
 halicole: A reference to a plant living in a habitat with high salt content.
 halicolous: 1. Living in haloid soils having a crystalloid content between 0.5 and 2 parts per thousand of salt content.  2. Used in reference to a plant living in a habitat with a high salt content. halide: A compound containing  halogen (i.e., bromine, chlorine, fluorine, or iodine) combined with a metal or some other radical.
 haligraphy: A treatise or dissertation on the nature and quality of salts.
 halimetry, halimetric: The measurement of the amount of saline matter in a solution.
 haline: An application either to the sea or to salt.
 halinous: Containing or consisting of salt; saline.
 haliography: A description of the sea.
 haliphagia: The ingestion of an abnormally large amount of salts; especially, sodium chloride, sodium bicarbonate, and the salts of calcium, magnesium, and potassium.
 haliplankton: Marine or inland saltwater planktonic organisms.
 halisteresis: Osteomalacia; a loss or lack of lime salts (calcium) in bone; halisteretic.
 halite: Native salt; sodium chloride.
 halobiont, halobiontic: A marine organism or an organism that lives in a saline habitat.
 halobios: The total life of the sea; that part of the Earths surface occupied by marine organisms; halibios
 halobiotic: A reference to life in the sea.
 halocline: 1. A vertical gradient in the saltiness of the ocean.  2. A salinity discontinuity; a zone of marked salinity gradient. halodermia: Any skin eruption caused by a halide.
 haloduric: Capable of existing in a medium containing a high concentration of salt.
 halogen: 1. Any of the five electronegative diatomic elements, fluorine, chlorine, iodine, bromine, or astatine; used to describe lamps or other light sources containing a filament heated by a halogen. So called because the elements readily form salts when combined with metals.  2. An element of a closely related chemical family, all of which form similar (saltlike) compounds in combination with sodium and most other metals. haloid: Saltlike; derived from or resembling a halogen.
 halokinesis: In geology, the study of the structure and processes involved in the formation of salt domes; salt tectonics.
 halolimnetic: Pertaining to salt lakes.
 halolimnic: Designating marine organisms so modified that they can live in fresh water.
 halology: A branch of chemistry that deals with salts.
 halomancy: Divination, or fortune telling, with the use of salt.
 halometer: An instrument for measuring the external form, angles, and planes of salt crystals.
 halometry: Measuring the external forms of  salt crystals.
 halomorphic: 1. Containing, or developed under the influence of, large quantities of salts other than calcium carbonate.  2. A description of an intrazonal soil having an accumulation of salts. halopexia: The retention of salt by the body.
 halophile, halophil: 1. A microorganism requiring a high concentration of salt for optimal growth.  2. Any life form that thrives in saline environments. halophilic: A reference to or characterized by an affinity for salt; applied to microorganisms that require a high concentration of salt for optimal growth.
 halophilous: Existing in saline habitats; such as, plants that thrive in salty soil; halophilic, halophily.
 halophobe: Any creature that is intolerant of saline life.
 halophobic: Intolerant of saline habitats.
 halophreatophyte: A plant utilizing saline ground water.
 halophyte: A plant living in saline conditions; for example, a plant tolerating or thriving in an alkaline soil rich in sodium and calcium salts; halophytic.
 haloplankton: Marine or inland salt-water plankton.
 halosphere: Saltwater areas as a whole; the marine portion of an environment.
 halosere: An ecological succession commencing in a saline habitat.
 halotechny: That branch of chemistry that deals with salts.
 halotolerant: Tolerating, although not necessarily preferring, a saline environment; haloxene.
 haloumi: A salty white Greek cheese with a tough rubbery texture that is usually grilled until a crust has formed on both sides and eaten hot.
 halozemia: The loss of salt by the body.
 holeuryhaline: A reference to organisms that freely inhabit fresh water, sea water, and brackish water.
 hyperhaline: Said of water that contains more than 40 parts per thousand of dissolved salts.
 mesohaline: Pertaining to brackish water having a salinity between three and 10 parts per thousand or sea water having a salinity between 30 and 34 parts per thousand.
 mixoeuhaline: A reference to estuarine waters (wide mouth of a river that flows into the sea) that contain more than 30 parts per thousand of dissolved salts but less than the concentration of the adjacent seas.
 mixohaline: A reference to any body of water that contains anywhere from 0.5 to 30 parts per thousand dissolved salts.
 mixomesohaline: Said of brackish water containing from 5 to 18 parts per thousand dissolved salts.
 mixooligohaline: An application to brackish waters containing from 0.5 to 5 parts per thousand dissolved salts.
 mixopolyhaline: A reference to brackish water containing from 18 to 30 parts per million dissolved salts.
 oligohalabous: A reference to planktonic organisms living in sea water of less than five parts per thousand salinity.
 oligohaline: 1. Characterized by salinity in the range immediately above that of fresh water.  2. A reference to organisms that are tolerant of only a moderate range of salinities. 3. Brackish water that has a salinity between 0.5 and 3.0 parts per thousand, or sea water having a salinity between 17 and 30 parts per thousand. polyhaline: Pertaining to brackish water having a salinity between 10 and 17 parts per thousand; or to sea water having a salinity greater than 34 parts per thousand.
 polyhalophilic: Thriving in a wide range of salinities; polyhalophile, polyhalophily.
 polystenohaline: Organisms that only inhabit oceanic waters of relatively constant high salinity.
 stenohaline: A reference to organisms that are capable of tolerating only slight variations in salt concentrations, but it also applies to those capable of tolerating only low concentrations.
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