It's actually closer to the other way around. Salt has been used for centuries, and that word is very old. Salt has been a commodity traded (bartered) and sold for as long as its uses were known. At a point in the past, Roman soldiers (and other "employees") were compensated for their services with salt. This gave rise to the word salarium, which spoke to the association between soldiers and salt, or to the use of salt as soldiers' compensation. The word salary appeared later, along with "worth his salt" and other phrases that connect payment for services using salt as a currency. There are a number of different (but similar) versions of the ideas presented here in various places on the web. A link can be found below to allow the curious etymologist to further investigate.
Salary and salt are derived from the Latin word sal.And sal is very probable of sanskrit origin.It is said that in ancient times salary may be paid with a ration of salt.
A salary is a monthly payment by an employer to an employee for his services for the past month. The word is derived from the Latin word salarius, which has to do with the allowance or payment of Roman soldiers with salt.
Salt is derived from the Latin word sal, salis. And sal is derived from salarium, because salary include frequently an amount of salt. It is not a complete answer, of course, but I don't know more.
The words salt in English, sel in French, sare in Romanian, etc. are derived from the Latin language word salarium (equivalent of salary). Salarium was the amount of money payed to Roman soldiers to buy salt.
Salt is a word derived from the Latin language word sal.
The root of salary is salt. Roman soldiers were sometimes paid their wages in salt.
Salt is derived from the word sal in Latin language.
salt
It is the Latin word for 'salt'. Salt was very valuable back then, and employers got paid by it.
At one time the [SALE] salt was not very much availableas today is. Roman soldiers were paid in salt being necessary for good health. Of course the roman latin word has changed to by the English as salary.
roman soldiers were traditionally paid in salt.
Salary goes back to the Latin word that originally denoted a 'allowance given to a Roman soldier for buying salt' This was 'Salarium,' a derivative of sal, 'salt.' Salt being in former times a valued commodity over which wars were fought, rather that taken for granted as it is today. It soon broadened out to mean 'fixed periodic payment for work done,' and passed in this sense via Anglo-Norman salarie into English. Source: Dictionary of Word Origins, John Ayto