Saltire vs Saltine - What's the difference?
saltire | saltine |
(heraldiccharge) An ordinary (geometric design) in the shape of an X. It usually occupies the entire field in which it is placed.
The Saint Andrew's cross, the flag of Scotland
* 2014 , Ian Jack, "
*{{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 1
, author=Tom Fordyce
, title=Rugby World Cup 2011: England 16-12 Scotland
, work=BBC Sport
As nouns the difference between saltire and saltine
is that saltire is an ordinary (geometric design) in the shape of an X. It usually occupies the entire field in which it is placed while saltine is a thin, crisp, salted, white-colored cracker, a soda cracker; the most common of all US crackers; soda biscuit.saltire
English
Noun
(en noun)Is this the end of Britishness", The Guardian , 16 September 2014:
- It was early August. In the Borders, there were few signs yet of a campaign that could take Scotland out of the United Kingdom. A large Y-E-S hung in separate letters from a tree on the road from Coldstream to Kelso. There wasn’t a N-O to match it, but Kelso town hall flew both the saltire and the union jack.
citation, page= , passage=But the World Cup winning veteran's left boot was awry again, the attempt sliced horribly wide of the left upright, and the saltires were waving aloft again a moment later when a long pass in the England midfield was picked off to almost offer up a breakaway try.}}