0 past simple and past participle of salvage --
1 to save goods from damage or destruction, especially from a ship that has sunk or been damaged or a building that has been damaged by fire or a flood: --
Certainly, moments of didactic clarity can be salvaged from these proceedings but enough to sustain a thesis about didactic legalism?
Here the second slot of a primary branching nucleus is salvaged by assigning it to the nucleus of an independent syllable.
Here the second slot of a target branching nucleus is salvaged through assignment to the nucleus of an independent syllable.
Through trisomy rescue of the fetus and loss of the father's chromosome 15, the pregnancy is salvaged and not spontaneously aborted.
Can anything be salvaged from the old negative paradigm?
The urban middle-class 'reformers' were incensed by the fact that the farmers had salvaged a part of the traditional economic fabric in the retirement contracts.
Two other large urns were reported to have been found during street construction some 15 m from the salvaged urn.
Yet the chiefs salvaged the rituals of succession, which ensured their legitimacy and their right to rule.