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Discover Ludwig'discardable' is a correct and usable word in written English
You can use it to describe something which can be removed or thrown away without having a major effect or consequence. For example, "The broken toy was discardable and easily replaced."
Dictionary
discardable
adjective
That can be discarded.
synonyms
Exact(7)
There is, understandably, a continual anger with the implied underlying belief that equality is pivotal – unless it's gender equality, in which case it's marginal and discardable.
The nightmarish sense of human life being as discardable as clay permeates his writing.
We have emerged in numbers at last, and are no longer invisible, discardable or silent.
During the descent, a discardable "aeroshell" will protect it against a scorching heat of several thousand degrees Celsius generated by atmospheric drag, while a supersonic parachute and nine thrusters will slow it down to a gentle speed for landing.
Its old version was that Indigenous peoples have always been in the way of progress, their interests a nuisance or threat, their treaties a discardable artifact.
"In the mind of the public, we literally go overnight from being an object of desire to being discardable," observes Legato, a slim and elegantly dressed 68-year-old with a perfectly coifed grayish-blond pageboy and ramrod-straight posture.
Last September, Doris Roberts, the septuagenarian actress who plays Ray Romano's mother on "Everybody Loves Raymond," told the Senate Special Committee on Aging that society views people her age as discardable.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com