| salvageable | Capable of being salvaged, saved or repaired. Worth rescuing and keeping rather discarding or replacing | en |
| salvageable | capable of being saved from ruin; "their marriage was not salvageable | en |
| salvageable | can be rescued, can be saved sıfat | en |
| salvageable | capable of being saved from ruin; "their marriage was not salvageable" | en |
| salvage | save from ruin, destruction, or harm | en |
| salvage | -An intermediate cutting made to remove trees that are dead or in imminent danger of being killed by injurious agents | en |
| salvage | Property that, because of its worn, damaged, deteriorated, or incomplete condition or specialized nature, has no reasonable prospect of sale or use as serviceable property without major repairs, but has some value in excess of its scrap value | en |
| salvage | (Sauvetage or Récupération) Property which has been damaged by an insured peril but still has some realizable value This value is taken into account in determining the amount of the loss It is also used as indicating the process of taking steps to reduce the amount of a loss Such as the removal of goods during the course of a fire to prevent damage or the removal of the goods after the fire to prevent further damage | en |
| salvage | An item of personal property which has parts that are usable or which can be recycled The item as a whole is in such poor shape that its repair is not practical, but its total destruction is not warranted | en |
| salvage | That which is recovered from the Principal or an indemnitor to offset in whole or in part the loss and expense incurred by a surety in satisfying obligations it has sustained under a bond | en |
| salvage | Harvesting damaged or defective trees for their economic value or for forest health Includes salvage of residual cedar, blow-down stands, and fire-damaged stands | en |
| salvage | Recovery made by an insurance company by the sale of property which has been taken over from the insured as a part of loss settlement | en |
| salvage | It is the right of the Insurer to take possession of property (salvage) for which it has paid Some Insurers, if agreed to by the Insured, will 'sell the salvage back' by deducting the salvage value from their settlement amount, and allowing the Insured to keep the property | en |
| salvage | Property that has been damaged by an insured peril but still has some realizable value; this value is taken into account when determining the amount of the loss | en |
| salvage | The saving and utilization of waste materials leftover from a remodeling job or a fire | en |
| salvage | In auto insurance: a) The remainder or residue of the damaged property usually claimed by the insurer after said property has been declared a total loss b) A vehicle which has been previously declared a total loss by an insurer | en |
| salvage | Damaged property that can be retrieved, reconditioned and sold to reduce an insured loss | en |
| salvage | the similar rescue of property liable to loss; the property so rescued | en |
| salvage | the ship, crew or cargo so rescued | en |
| salvage | to make new or restore for the use of being saved | en |
| salvage | to put discarded goods to use | en |
| salvage | to rescue property or people at risk | en |
| salvage | the rescue of a ship, its crew or its cargo from a hazardous situation | en |
| salvage | the compensation paid to the rescuers | en |
| salvage | Recovery of materials for on-site reuse or donation to a third party | en |
| salvage | The value of property after fire or other peril which value is used to reduce the total loss | en |
| salvage | Process of recovering a ship or cargo from a loss or damage due to maritime perils | en |
| salvage | anything that has been put to good use that would otherwise have been wasted | en |
| salvage | A Salvage title is assigned to a vehicle that has been declared a total loss resulting from Fire, Vandalism, Collision, Theft, Flood or other occurrence Salvage titles are further broken down into two categories | en |
| salvage | Property transferred to an insurer to reduce its loss The insurer secures an ownership interest from paying a claim for total loss or damage based on the true value of the property in its undamaged state or before the loss occurred | en |
| salvage | If something is salvaged, someone manages to save it, for example from a ship that has sunk, or from a building that has been damaged. The team's first task was to decide what equipment could be salvaged The investigators studied flight recorders salvaged from the wreckage | en |
| salvage | act of saving, act of rescuing; act of saving a ship or its cargo from destruction; property that has been saved, rescued items isim | en |
| salvage | Salvage is the act of salvaging things from somewhere such as a damaged ship or building. The salvage operation went on. the cost of salvage | en |
| salvage | The salvage from somewhere such as a damaged ship or building is the things that are saved from it. They climbed up on the rock with their salvage | en |
| salvage | The property which has been recovered from a wrecked vessel, or the recovery of the ship herself | en |
| salvage | save from destruction, rescue fiil | en |
| salvage | The act of saving a vessel, goods, or life, from perils of the sea | en |
| salvage | Savage | en |
| salvage | the act of rescuing a ship or its crew or its cargo from a shipwreck or a fire the act of saving goods or property that were in danger of damage or destruction property or goods saved from damage or destruction collect discarded or refused material; "She scavenged the garbage cans for food" | en |
| salvage | That part of the property that survives the peril and is saved | en |
| salvage | The compensation allowed to persons who voluntarily assist in saving a ship or her cargo from peril | en |
| salvage | If you salvage something such as your pride or your reputation, you manage to keep it even though it seems likely you will lose it, or you get it back it after losing it. We definitely wanted to salvage some pride for British tennis | en |
| salvage | If you manage to salvage a difficult situation, you manage to get something useful from it so that it is not a complete failure. Officials tried to salvage the situation | en |
| salvage | property or goods saved from damage or destruction | en |
| salvage | recovery made by an insurance company by the sale of property which has been taken over from the insured as a part-loss of settlement | en |
| salvage | The remaining value of property after severe damage by fire or other peril The overall loss is reduced by the salvage value Undamaged property may be quite saleable and some property may be partially damaged, thus repairable and then saleable | en |
| salvage | Salvaged merchandise refers to products that can no longer be sold "as new" There is a large percentage of merchandise that is damaged while in transit to retail stores For instance, a pallet of toys may have packaging damage The retailer cannot sell the toys as new because the individual boxes show wear or tear This merchandise gets set to the side and labeled "Salvage" Salvage can also refer to merchandise that has been returned to the store for any number of reasons | en |
| salvage | When an insurer makes a payment for lost or damaged property, the insurer is entitled to the salvage of that property | en |
| salvage | (1) Property taken over by an insurance company to reduce its loss; (2) Award recoverable by salvors under maritime law | en |
| salvage | Damaged policyholder property that is legally signed over to an insurer in a loss settlement Insurance companies sell salvaged property in order to reduce their overall monetary loss | en |
| salvage | the act of rescuing a ship or its crew or its cargo from a shipwreck or a fire | en |
| salvage | the act of saving goods or property that were in danger of damage or destruction | en |
| salvage | collect discarded or refused material; "She scavenged the garbage cans for food" | en |
| salvage | Property taken over by an insurer to reduce its loss (G) | en |