Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
employable
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ She's highly employable, so she shouldn't have any trouble finding work.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And young people need to be educated in new ways to be employable.
▪ I don't think she's otherwise employable, poor girl.
▪ Perhaps I was not at first sight the most employable of people.
▪ The course is recognized for producing graduates who are immediately employable and who can play leading roles in the development of computing.
▪ The traditional, massive unemployment of employable disabled people is far worse than it has ever been.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Employable
Employable \Em*ploy"a*ble\, a. [Cf. F. employable.]
Capable of being employed; capable of being used; fit or
proper for use.
--Boyle.
[1913 Webster] ||
Wiktionary
employable
a. (context especially of a person English) Able to be employed.
WordNet
employable
adj. physically and mentally capable of working at a regular job and available [ant: unemployable]
Usage examples of "employable".
He became even less employable than he had been before the miracle, as he could seldom go through an entire day without getting into a heated argument with his boss or a customer or fellow worker about religion.
He found a skilled electronics expert no longer employable because of alcoholism.
Unwed mothers were not in vogue then, and I doubt she had any employable skills.