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do you own a single letter .com domain ?
i got the IDN domain :
ā.com ( xn--yda.com )
ā is a regular latin letter a with macron
i got a lot inquieries :
Uniregistry.com 22
Sedo.com 3
Private 3
in the time of smartphones and tablets , it is very simple to type in these IDN letters
it is just a matter of time...
Ā, lowercase ā,
is a grapheme, a Latin A with a macron, is used in several orthographies.
In some languages Ā is used to denote a long A. Examples are the Baltic languages, Polynesian languages, some romanizations of Japanese (rōmaji), Persian, Pashto, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic (which represents a long A sound) and Arabic, and some Latin texts (especially for learners).
In Romanised Mandarin Chinese (pinyin) it is used to represent A spoken with a level high tone (first tone). It is used in some orthography-based transcriptions of English to represent the diphthong /eɪ/ (see Vowel length § Traditional long and short vowels in English orthography), and also in commercial names such as
Drāno and Powerāde.
In the International Alphabet of Sanskrit Transliteration, Ā represents the open back unrounded vowel, आ, not to be confused with the similar Devanagari character for the mid central vowel, अ.
In the languages other than Sanskrit, Ā is sorted with other A's and is not considered a separate letter. The macron is only considered when sorting words that are otherwise identical. For example, in Māori, tāu (meaning your) comes after tau (meaning year), but before taumata (hill).
i got the IDN domain :
ā.com ( xn--yda.com )
ā is a regular latin letter a with macron
i got a lot inquieries :
Uniregistry.com 22
Sedo.com 3
Private 3
in the time of smartphones and tablets , it is very simple to type in these IDN letters
it is just a matter of time...
Ā, lowercase ā,
is a grapheme, a Latin A with a macron, is used in several orthographies.
In some languages Ā is used to denote a long A. Examples are the Baltic languages, Polynesian languages, some romanizations of Japanese (rōmaji), Persian, Pashto, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic (which represents a long A sound) and Arabic, and some Latin texts (especially for learners).
In Romanised Mandarin Chinese (pinyin) it is used to represent A spoken with a level high tone (first tone). It is used in some orthography-based transcriptions of English to represent the diphthong /eɪ/ (see Vowel length § Traditional long and short vowels in English orthography), and also in commercial names such as
Drāno and Powerāde.
In the International Alphabet of Sanskrit Transliteration, Ā represents the open back unrounded vowel, आ, not to be confused with the similar Devanagari character for the mid central vowel, अ.
In the languages other than Sanskrit, Ā is sorted with other A's and is not considered a separate letter. The macron is only considered when sorting words that are otherwise identical. For example, in Māori, tāu (meaning your) comes after tau (meaning year), but before taumata (hill).