salvage

salvage
(sal-va-j') s. m.
Terme de marine. Il n'est usité que dans cette locution : Droit de salvage, droit sur ce qu'on a sauvé d'un bâtiment naufragé.
   On dit aujourd'hui : droit de sauvetage.
   Lat. salvare, sauver (voy. sauver).

Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré. . 1872-1877.

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  • salvage — sal·vage / sal vij/ n 1 a: compensation paid for saving a ship or its cargo from the perils of the sea or for recovering it from an actual loss (as in a shipwreck) b: the act of saving or rescuing a ship or its cargo c: the act of saving or… …   Law dictionary

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  • Salvage — Sal vage (?; 48), n. [F. salvage, OF. salver to save, F. sauver, fr. L. salvare. See {Save}.] 1. The act of saving a vessel, goods, or life, from perils of the sea. [1913 Webster] Salvage of life from a British ship, or a foreign ship in British… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • salvage — (n.) 1640s, payment for saving a ship from wreck or capture, from Fr. salvage, from O.Fr. salver to save (see SAVE (Cf. save)). The general sense of the saving of property from danger is attested from 1878. Meaning recycling of waste material is… …   Etymology dictionary

  • salvage — [sal′vij] n. [Fr < MFr < salver, to SAVE1] 1. a) the voluntary rescue of a ship or its cargo at sea from peril such as fire, shipwreck, capture, etc. b) compensation paid for such a rescue c) the ship or cargo so rescued d) th …   English World dictionary

  • Salvage — Sal vage, a. & n. Savage. [Obs.] Spenser. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Salvage — (franz., spr. ßalwāsch ), soviel wie Berge oder Hilfslohn, vgl. Bergen …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

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  • salvage — [v] save, rescue deliver, get back, glean, ransom, reclaim, recover, redeem, regain, restore, retrieve, salve; concept 134 Ant. endanger, harm, hurt, injure, lose, waste …   New thesaurus

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