domain Copyings - com - the official plural word of copying

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analyzes

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Anywho.. i'm curious. and yes its the plural word of copying i know its an obscure word possibly. but i'm curious myself regardless.



I checked the trends, keywords, markets etc. and it keeps showing me the market info for "copy" as its the plural of copying


See references:
(just posting a few)


wordreference.com/definition/copyings

en.wiktionary.org/wiki/copyings

en.wiktionary.org/wiki/copyings

thesaurus.com/browse/copyings

definitions.net/definition/copyings

glosbe.com/en/en/copyings

memidex.com/copyings

Example of use:

Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the effect of camera control devices of Cerec 2 on the fit of CAD/CAM all-ceramic copyings of posterior tooth.
METHODS:
24 all-ceramic copyings were made by Cerec 2 with camera control devices and that without camera control devices. Copyings were embed and sectioned, then SEM and image analyzer was used to measure the space between the copyings and dies at the marginal opening, the axial wall, and the occlusal adaptation at the measurement locations.
RESULTS:
The marginal fit at buccal space of copyings with camera control devices group was smaller than that without camera control devices group (P < 0.05). The internal fit of of copyings had statistically significant difference at mesio-axial, disto-axial, bucco-axial, bucco-occlusal, linguo-occlusal and disto-occlusal space between camera control device group and without camera control devices group (P < 0.05). There was no statistical difference on the marginal fit and internal fit of copyings between Vita MK II and porous alumina oxide (P < 0.05).
CONCLUSION:
The Cerec 2 with camera control devices reduced effectively the inaccuracy of inner space of copyings which contributed from the technical errors of the operator, and provided well-proportioned space for adhesive. Both the fit of copyings made of Vita MK II and porous alumina oxide satisfied the clinical demand
 
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Sorry this is worth $0, drop the name

No commercial use for this name

The fact that you were able to hand reg the name today must tell you something
 
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Doubt that

Sorry this is worth $0, drop the name

No commercial use for this name

The fact that you were able to hand reg the name today must tell you something

While i may not see any use for copyings.com, the fact that he handregged the name today has nothing to do with its "Userbility" I have handregged a name that sold for $900 and i handregged the name in january 2013, sold it for $900 in march. The person initially offered me $1500 but i had already put it on godaddy for $900 so i directed the buyer to godaddy to get it. Point is, the name was worth as high as $1500 and it was handregged!

One word name, a service, but it was a dot co

I believe there are still great names out there to be handregged but it just needs more research.
 
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Doubt It

While i may not see any use for copyings.com, the fact that he handregged the name today has nothing to do with its "Userbility" I have handregged a name that sold for $900 and i handregged the name in january 2013, sold it for $900 in march. The person initially offered me $1500 but i had already put it on godaddy for $900 so i directed the buyer to godaddy to get it. Point is, the name was worth as high as $1500 and it was handregged!
.

There will not be many copyings of that feat with names like this.
 
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:talk:

you can't just go around adding "s" to end of words
 
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Already in transaction. just took a few emails is all. Anywho, just took looking for copy related websites that are fairly decent size that had a dumb domain name themselves already.

a sniplet from the contract (added the X's for the crawlers sake)

The current owner of the domain name identified below (hereinafter referred to as “Seller”) desires to sell all rights, title and interest in such domain name to the Purchaser, and the Purchaser desires to acquire same rights, title and interest in such domain name from the Seller. Therefore, it is agreed between the parties as follows:

1. The domain name to be transferred from the Seller to the Purchaser is coXXpyXingXgs.com and coXpyXinXgs.net (referred to sometimes herein as “domain names.”)

2. The Seller agrees to transfer to the Purchaser all right, title and interest in and to the identified domain name, including any trademark rights associated with the domain name itself and all Internet traffic to the domain name. Notwithstanding, this Agreement does not relate to any Website content, which shall remain the property of the Seller.

3. As consideration for the sale of the domain name the Purchaser promised to pay the Seller the amount of $1,200.00. This sum shall be paid within three (3) business days from the date this Agreement becomes effective. In the event that payment is not timely received this Agreement may be cancelled by the Seller at the Seller’s sole discretion


---------- Post added at 12:40 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:39 PM ----------

:talk:

you can't just go around adding "s" to end of words


can /. did / sold

you can when adding the s is still an official word. :notme:
 
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if you care to look... the customer has already put the site into use :) ... a not so good name to some, is great to others. you just have to find the right person to market it to.
 
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While i may not see any use for copyings.com, the fact that he handregged the name today has nothing to do with its "Userbility" I have handregged a name that sold for $900 and i handregged the name in january 2013, sold it for $900 in march. The person initially offered me $1500 but i had already put it on godaddy for $900 so i directed the buyer to godaddy to get it. Point is, the name was worth as high as $1500 and it was handregged!

One word name, a service, but it was a dot co

I believe there are still great names out there to be handregged but it just needs more research.

Yeah, but .co is a lot different, there are hundreds of strange words available in .co for hand-reg. I can go and hand-reg a real word in plenty of abstract extensions right now, try and see how many you find in .COM

You will also notice that their business domain is moxicopy.com (owned since 2007)

This is not a new site they have built on the name, they have just redirected the name to their main site
 
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it IS a .COM.. and to be exact, i've hand reg'd 96 (if you check whois) in the last month or so. only ONE is a two word domain, the rest are single word. - the majority is common words that I take straight to market, and don't post about on a site. - by single common word, i mean just that. no "s" on the end, nothing but just a dictionary word or term. they're out there, you just have to look :)
 
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I can see only one use for it - as a brand in the business of talking about things being copied. Maybe a blog about copyright - the name is kinda memorable if it has a niche topic use.

Certainly not as a brand for a copy center, that would be embarrassing!
 
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One word name, a service, but it was a dot co

I was referrring to Kozey11 name about the .CO


the majority is common words that I take straight to market,

I can assure you they are not common words, post a couple and I can assure you 99% of people on this site woouldnt buy them off you for reg-fee

Do you really think there would be common dictionary words available to hand-register? Cmon, they were gone years ago (late 90's) and people dont let them drop

PM me with the names if you dont want to post them and I will let you know
 
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PM me with the names if you dont want to post them and I will let you know

He just made $1200 in under 1 day on a name you said was $0 and is not a word that any english speaker has used in the last hundred years.

You think he needs your help? :xf.love:
 
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Exactly

He just made $1200 in under 1 day on a name you said was $0 and is not a word that any english speaker has used in the last hundred years.

You think he needs your help? :xf.love:

This goes to prove that sometimes the guys at namepros are too pessimistic. The name i sold for 900 was put up here for appraisal a few weeks before i sold it

Most of em told me they won't even pay reg fee for it..

---------- Post added at 07:00 AM ---------- Previous post was at 06:55 AM ----------

Already in transaction. just took a few emails is all. Anywho, just took looking for copy related websites that are fairly decent size that had a dumb domain name themselves already.

a sniplet from the contract (added the X's for the crawlers sake)



---------- Post added at 12:40 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:39 PM ----------




can /. did / sold

you can when adding the s is still an official word. :notme:

See i told you, most of the sellers on name pros love bargains and are quick to tell you your name is worthless. i bet you if you had dropped that name today, they will hand reg it themselves
Slimy guys:|
 
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He just made $1200 in under 1 day on a name you said was $0 and is not a word that any english speaker has used in the last hundred years.

You think he needs your help?

Yes DU, I believe so...if hes just hand-regged 96 in the last month and they are random dictionary words?? I am curious more than anything the types of names he regging?

guys at namepros are too pessimistic.

realistic is the word, Im just trying to help here guys, you ask for appaisals, you will get them, you dont have to like it

i bet you if you had dropped that name today, they will hand reg it themselves

lol, not really, I know all the names available from the dictionary because I have software that searches this for me on a weekly basis and I certainly wont register any of them


Anyway, good luck with future sales
 
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regfees - the official plural word of regfee
 
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Hand reg is still available on many names. I have a list of around 50 common words that i've not even got around to registering until I market the ones currently reg'd.

Insight: If you know nothing about marketing... learn this one valuable lesson.

Words are NOT an infinite market. IE: There are ONLY SO MANY WORDS! But.. The web grows quickly. Every day thousands of new websites go up. Young people grow up and want to get on the internet, companies get founded and want to get online. What may seem as an "obscure" or even "trashy" word today, could be worth a fortune tomorrow.. simply because you're in a market of Supply and Demand, where the Demand is GROWING, but the SUPPLY is strictly limited... we just can't go around making up enough words every day to supply an entire world market.

NEVER underestimate the value your market or of domains or words based on yesterdays standards, view it from tomorrow's viewpoint. The web, just as with any market changes DAILY. A domain you valued at $0 for obscurity 2 years ago, could sell for 10k tomorrow. It's simple marketing 101.

The Second Edition of the 20-volume Oxford English Dictionary contains full entries for 171,476 words in current use, and 47,156 obsolete words. To this may be added around 9,500 derivative words included as subentries. Over half of these words are nouns, about a quarter adjectives, and about a seventh verbs; the rest is made up of exclamations, conjunctions, prepositions, suffixes, etc. And these figures don't take account of entries with senses for different word classes (such as noun and adjective).

This suggests that there are, at the very least, a quarter of a million distinct English words, excluding inflections, and words from technical and regional vocabulary not covered by the OED, or words not yet added to the published dictionary, of which perhaps 20 per cent are no longer in current use. If distinct senses were counted, the total would probably approach three quarters of a million.

Now, considering that i'm an analyst, and also a programmer. It wasn't too hard to get the links for domain queries. (Most will ban after a few hundred queries.)
Open VB (visual basics) compile a little tool for loading a list (usually 1000 or so at a time) of words, click start. it queries each word and if a "congratulations" response is detected - it adds it to a new list. After the query limit is reached, it simply drops the server and goes to the next to begin again.
I usually wind up with 1 or 2 words out of every few thousand scanned for.

then simply hand reg the ones wanted from the list.

Hope the insight helps.
 
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If "Copyings" is even an actual word, it is a very obscure word with limited actual use.

I challenge you to legitimately use the word "copyings" in a sentence.

Most of the references you provided have it as a secondary entry.

For instance the first link (wordreference.com/definition/copyings) has no definitions for that word. It has copy, copies, copying, and copied listed however.

Considering this domain was just registered yesterday, it is pretty amazing it has already been sold.

Only time will tell if selling obscure words is something that is replicable, or that sale was just a fluke.

Brad
 
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has your sale completed yet? cash received and domain pushed?
 
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This is not a new site they have built on the name, they have just redirected the name to their main site

Actually, no. If you look at the browser bar, they actually use copyings.com as their new platform. They are just using their old logo.

Certainly not as a brand for a copy center, that would be embarrassing!

I challenge you to legitimately use the word "copyings" in a sentence.

Djeez, guys, how about "congrats, happy for you, you proved us wrong"?
 
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Just like good looks on people beauty is in the eye of the beholder. When you ask for appraisels on here we are looking at it froma standpoint of do we think this would sell and can it b developed.

Domains that get offers steaily do not need to be marketed. the end user comes to YOU. 98% of domains that ask for "how much" are domains that DONT get end uses asking and they have to be maketed to them. Almost spoon fed because they are not actively looking for them.

So in a nut shell if you get a lot of us saying its not worth reg fee then so be it. Dont get mad just either work day and night to try and sell it or let it drop because again the domain does not have star appeal it has shit appeal that has to be maketed as fresh smelling flowers :)

SIDE NOTE: I am going to go on a limb as well to say the OP has built the site himself or in conjunction with others and not sold the domain. Got my ideas but rather not share till I am 100% sure hence the limb (just the arm) :bah:
 
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