Thanks for the reply.
If a term doesn't sound familiar initially, the best way to verify it is ask old Google. What you do is first paste the word in one conglomerate with no spaces like MortgageCapital. If Google comes back with "Did you mean" term, then that is the fist step to finding if Google notices the terms together.
Then place quotes(") around the corrected Google suggestion like this- "Mortgage Capital". The results you get from this are what really matters most, experts would say. In this case, Mortgage Capital is found together in Google 728,000 times which I consider substantial. This is a well known financial term, to those involved in the industry.
This is a good way also of saving the heartache of wasting money on a domain that merely sounds, rather than is good. Use this test next time when appraising someones domain.
Friendly advice!
One more thing turner67.
You may want to reevaluate the purpose of the .info. Sure, it is for information purposes, but have you ever bought anything or signed up for X services without needing information first? I know I haven't. Today's buyer is increasingly smarter, and requires more information before making a purchase decision. This is where the .info TLD shines, since it is more geared to the consumer.
It will never replace the .com, but acts in a way like a little brother who supports and optimizes the parent site. You are not limited to mere definitions. Remember that so you can jump on the .info train before it's too late (almost is).
A lot of people see this as one of the best investments you could make now.