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gl
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Posts: 8 Joined: 13 Dec 2006 15:58
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by gl » 17 Dec 2006 13:48
For you, does this two words make sense used in pair ?
Betting UP
What does they suggest ?
They are not inserted in a particular context or phrase, but used for a domain name, bettingup.com
bye
Last edited by
gl on 17 Dec 2006 20:32, edited 1 time in total.
BlackKimono
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Posts: 38 Joined: 11 Dec 2006 11:42
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by BlackKimono » 17 Dec 2006 16:27
Sounds like a cool domain name for a poker site
.
gl
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Posts: 8 Joined: 13 Dec 2006 15:58
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by gl » 17 Dec 2006 19:25
BlackKimono wrote: Sounds like a cool domain name for a poker site
.
Thank you BlackKimono
ANTHOS
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by ANTHOS » 20 Dec 2006 21:46
These two words mean nothing to me
However, maybe it means something to poker experts or to Americans (I only know British English)
ElieDeLeuze
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Location: Lörrach
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by ElieDeLeuze » 20 Dec 2006 22:14
Thank you for making publicity for this site.
gl
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Posts: 8 Joined: 13 Dec 2006 15:58
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by gl » 21 Dec 2006 16:34
ANTHOS wrote: These two words mean nothing to me
However, maybe it means something to poker experts or to Americans (I only know British English)
This is what I was looking for: the opinion of a mother tongue english speaker (english or american) if it does not mean something to you, I will discard it, even though most domain names mean nothing.
gl
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Posts: 8 Joined: 13 Dec 2006 15:58
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by gl » 21 Dec 2006 16:36
ElieDeLeuze wrote: Thank you for making publicity for this site.
This is not any kind of pubblicity because this site doesn't exist
BlackKimono
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Posts: 38 Joined: 11 Dec 2006 11:42
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by BlackKimono » 21 Dec 2006 18:21
even though most domain names mean nothing.
Yes, that's a good thing to keep in mind
.
My guess would be that "betting up" is not a used phrasal verb itself, but it's not gibberish either.
I'm not a native but it still sounds rationable to me
.