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[ US /ˈseɪɫəbəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. capable of being sold; fit for sale
    saleable at a low price

How To Use salable In A Sentence

  • A likely scenario is that banks will realize that suburban homes that are not near transit will become unsalable. Globe and Mail
  • Lamb yield grades are also an indicator of the percent of salable meat that a carcass will yield.
  • Failure to observe the tithes would invoke not only severe Divine punishment but in most cases would render the grain religiously inedible and consequently unsalable.
  • Students are the best judges of their teachers whom they see all day five days a week just as customers of any salable item evaluate their satisfaction or disappointment with their purchase. Joel Shatzky: Educating for Democracy: Let Students Fire the Teachers - A Modest Proposal
  • But Keynes smoothed over the harsh Marxist anti-individualism with artful sophistry and clever rhetoric into something salable to Americans.
  • If experiments on that scale didn't produce anything salable year after year, the government would have been more than unhappy. PEARL COVE
  • These South Jersey soils are easily cleared of brushwood or standing timber, and of stumps, with a hand or horse-power puller which is a cheap affair, and the wood is salable in all this part of the State at remunerative prices, often bringing more than the original cost of the land. Three Acres and Liberty
  • But with the great influence of Lixue, there was a morality utmost when they published novels. They didn't publish the Jinpingmei and other salable raffish novels.
  • If you have any artistic leanings, this aspect helps your expression become more salable.
  • So let your imagination go; so what if whatever you produce isn't what I'd call salable? Jinx High
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