salvage
Meanings
noun
- The rescue of a ship, its crew and passengers or its cargo from a hazardous situation.
- The ship, crew or cargo so rescued.
- The compensation paid to the rescuers.
- The money from the sale of rescued goods.
- The similar rescue of property liable to loss; the property so rescued.
- The process of acquiring, dismantling, and stocking the pieces of old property such as ships, houses, and vehicles, so that they can be sold on to be reused or recycled.
- Anything put to good use that would otherwise have been wasted, such as damaged goods.
verb
- To rescue.
- To modify (a false proposition) to create a true proposition.
- To put to use.
- To make new or restore for the use of being saved.
noun
- Obsolete spelling of savage.
noun
- Summary execution, extrajudicial killing.
verb
- To perform summary execution.
- To apprehend and execute (a suspected criminal) without trial.
name
- A town in Newfoundland, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.
Pronunciation
Word forms
Etymology
From Old French salver (see also save, from a variant form), from Late Latin salvare (“to make safe, secure, save”), from Latin salvus (“safe”) with the English suffix -age.
Related words
Derived words
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.