Salami is a type of strong-flavoured sausage. It is usually thinly sliced and eaten cold. a large sausage with a strong taste that is eaten cold (salare , from sale )
Ancient city, Cyprus. Located on Cyprus's eastern coast, it had an active trade with Phoenicia, Egypt, and Cilicia. According to tradition, it was founded by Teucer, a hero of the Trojan War. A major Hellenic centre during the struggles between Greece and Persia, it was the scene of a Greek naval victory in 449 BC; in 306 BC the Macedonian king Demetrius I (Poliorcetes) defeated Ptolemy I (Soter) of Egypt near there. The city was visited later by SS Paul and Barnabas. It was known as Constantia after the Byzantine emperor Constantius II rebuilt it (AD 337-61). It was abandoned after its destruction by the Arabs in 647-48
salami
الواصلة
sa·la·mi
التركية النطق
sılämi
النطق
/səˈlämē/ /səˈlɑːmiː/
علم أصول الكلمات
() Italian, plural of salame (“salami”). From sale (“salt”), from Latin sal.