What's going on? A few years ago they would have never made it onto a deleted list.
Some are, but some of the .coms I've picked up recently are
Coacts
Crustings
Gawpe
Pasteurises
Putrefact
Sensitised
and those don't include the urban dictionary words.
Because they are crap, dot-com or not won't change that.Some are, but some of the .coms I've picked up recently are
Coacts
Crustings
Gawpe
Pasteurises
Putrefact
Sensitised
and those don't include the urban dictionary words.
One thing I would ask the OP - so, are you saying that even dictionary words of this low domain quality were not appearing as deletes/drops before? Because if so - then, okay! this thread has some meaning - that even crap dictionary names did not appear as available before now. Is that the case?
Which, not to belabor (belabour? lol) the point of how garbagey these names are, but - these are dot coms - typically the realm of U.S. companies/users, so British spellings that might be apposite in a .co.uk are completely out of place in a dot com. A U.S. company/user is going to look for a British spelling in its website? I don't think so.
Some are, but some of the .coms I've picked up recently areWords that most people haven't heard of?
I don’t know...but taxmatic sold for two grand. Check namebio.
I have heard them first, I will try to find my English teacher.Some are, but some of the .coms I've picked up recently are
Coacts
Crustings
Gawpe
Pasteurises
Putrefact
Sensitised
and those don't include the urban dictionary words.
What's going on? A few years ago they would have never made it onto a deleted list.
I've made a lot of money in my life by selling iron.
These don't strike me as words most people are familiar with.
Am I wrong here?
I need a new dictionary then, so that I can learn words like "taxmatic" - is that like asthmatic?
If they drop its because noone wanted it, it has no obvious value, or is not commercially usable.