A car that has been brought back from the "graveyard" (or junkyard) is commonly referred to as having a "salvage title". This means that the car was either stolen and un-recovered or (most commonly) that the insurance company deemed it uneconomical to repair and declared the vehicle a "total loss". The vehicle was later repaired.
In most cases a vehicle with a "salvage title" cannot receive "full coverage" auto insurance and can never be issued a "clear title".
Yes
It is hard to find anything salvageable in a house hit by a tornado. There was nothing salvageable in my relationship with my biological mother because she Londoner me years ago. None of my food was salvageable after my dog got a hold of it. The wind is so strong I'm scared it will cause that tree to fall onto my car, then nothing will be salvageable.
yes
Depends on what it is, how much is salvageable for parts, and how in demand those parts are.
yes, itis a salvageable metal
It might not be salvageable. See Related Links. Look under "Fingernail Polish Remover Smell."
Scorched earth policy
There are many of them. Here are just 10 of them. Amenable. Available. Doable. Readable. Manageable. Sustainable. Salvageable. Enable. Pliable. Palpable.
You will have to send them back to their respecitve makers with a full description of what happened to find out if they are salvageable.
Advertise the car on eBay for parts
Could mean a couple different things. It might be referring to the vehicle's finish (paint), but, in automotive terms, strip usually refers to removing resellable/salvageable parts from the vehicle, essentially leaving only the chassis and perhaps body. This is commonly done in salvage yards with wrecked vehicles, and also in illegal chop shops, which strip down stolen cars to remove individual parts for resale.
You soak it up with a paper towel or a towel.