From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishsaleablesale‧a‧ble, salable /ˈseɪləbəl/ adjective BBMsomething that is saleable can be sold, or is easy to sell a saleable commodity —saleability /ˌseɪləˈbɪləti/ noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
saleable• All sorts of things are saleable.• Please support us by providing bric-a-brac, clothes, unwanted but saleable articles, etc.• Newcastle will bid to keep him but they need the cash and the 22-goal schemer is their most saleable asset.• No further excuse was needed to organise a saleable exhibition of king-hell Jimibelia.• Large or small, a home is always more saleable if it has gas central heating.• Renaissance bureaucracy treated offices as saleable property.• And because she had no training, she had no saleable skills.• It is a fatal error to assume that lowering the price makes an indifferent product saleable to a general market.From Longman Business Dictionarysaleablesale‧a‧ble /ˈseɪləbəl/ (also salable) adjective1something that is saleable is easy to sellSmall second-hand hatchbacks are readily saleable.2something that is saleable can be soldLand is a freely saleable commodity like anything else. —saleability noun [uncountable]ideas on how to improve the saleability of the product