English Language & Usage Asked by rand0m1 on September 16, 2020
I am looking specifically in the context of used, discarded or lost material (perhaps ships, trucks, weaponry and the like).
I have considered forager, scavenger and pirate; however the first seems to me to attach more of a connotation of food, the second adds the sense of animals to food, and the last intimates more of theft and violence.
Perhaps this sentence may give some insight.
The salvage ship plied its trade through uncharted backwaters, searching for the abandoned detritus of yesterday’s business.
How would you call who worked on that ship?
A traditional word for those who salvage on the sea is "wrecker". It's evocative of a time when salvaging wasn't considered a very nice thing to do. Example PDF.
On land:
The used equipment business I've been involved in requires that we go to auctions and buy equipment at the cheapest possible prices. One of the groups of people you meet at these auctions are called "scrappers". They purchase metal items (and plastic and perhaps others) at auctions for their scrap value. Some of them own their own scrap yards but we might buy something that we know we can scrap.
Anyway, scrappers sometimes are on the wrong side of the law in that if you leave a thing around long enough, which has enough scrap value, and the thing is in a region which is sufficiently unobserved, then eventually a scrapper will come along, take it up, and sell it to a scrap yard. I've spent time at night watching for these folks and have surprised them a few times. In this sense, "scrapper" means "scrap metal thieves".
A typical object for scrappers is manhole covers. "A scrapper might get about $20 covers and grates, but it can cost the city more than $200 to replace a single manhole cover. A few years ago, scrappers got only $35 a ton compared to the current $425 price for a ton." –mjperry.blogspot.com
Correct answer by Carl Brannen on September 16, 2020
Salvager
is a perfectly cromulent word, according to none other than the Gray Lady herself.
Off topic, but that sentence is fully Bulwer-Lytton compliant. Two clichés, a pleonasm, and whatever "yesterday's business" is -- in fewer than 20 words.
Answered by Malvolio on September 16, 2020
scrounger and vulture are possibilities. The latter would have negative and poetic connotations.
Answered by gbutters on September 16, 2020
You could call that person a salvager or a salvage operator.
Answered by Robusto on September 16, 2020
One who salvages is a salvager.
Answered by Dan on September 16, 2020
Here's some possibilites to chew on:
marauders
sweepers
forayers
rovers
poachers
scroungers
borrowers
tinkerers
magpies
Jawas
Answered by Callithumpian on September 16, 2020
I'd think the specific word meaning this would be salvor, although it isn't so common as to be approved by the spell-checker as I type this. See here. It also appears to mean one who applies ointment.
Answered by Brian Hooper on September 16, 2020
The word in maritime law is salvor
Answered by Pete Wilson on September 16, 2020
A salvor.
According to Wordreference:
Salvor (noun): a person who salvages or helps to salvage a ship, cargo, etc.
Answered by Veekram on September 16, 2020
Get help from others!
Recent Questions
Recent Answers
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP