what I obviously meant was that "although" its technically a dictionary word its not what people in the domain space would refer to as such, also, the term generic means to be a classification for many things, such as "insurance" is the generic word for "car insurance", "life insurance" and so on, I was just trying to explain that if you want to be taken seriously you dont classify a word like this as dictionary or generic, but good luck with your domain, its not about good appraisals that you get but only about offers, and who knows, maybe you get a good one down the road..guy0102 said:It's in any dictionary. The word fluke. Or you can be flukey. (lucky)
.... To correct the first posting though, it is generic.
:boink:
guy0102 said:Cheers preoccupy,
I still think it has alot of potential, just interested in others views. Everyone has their own ideas on what can work. My theory is if it's a TLD, short & sweet & memorable, plus easy to spell, you won't go far wrong. One example I always say is there are certain domain names that are basically sh*t. However the web devlopment & company development is outstanding. Two examples: Godaddy.com
123-reg.com
In actual fact ebay & google weren't the best 'names' they did alright!
:jaw:
Take it easy, Guy
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