" Professional marketing companies often generate fake words with popular-sounding names"
I think that's bad for the brain to have meaningless words. It's one thing to mix letters as a fad in modern vernacular, but some words seem like they need a neurological basis for "soundness." Though if Modern English historically shows that most words are a mutation of earlier semantics, then I don't know what to say.
On Monday, May 7, 2012 2:34:02 AM UTC-4, Jonathan Cline wrote:
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On Sunday, May 6, 2012 8:44:45 AM UTC-7, Mega wrote:
I would love to call it "Spartan Biotech" because with Sparta I associate making very much from very little.
And killing babies deemed too weak to contribute to society. Not a great meme, that sparta stuff.
One trick for choosing a name is to set up on a free blogger site first, then after several articles and reader feedback, pick the name most resembling the theme from your posts. Professional marketing companies often generate fake words with popular-sounding syllables, especially for pharma products, seems to me.
## Jonathan Cline
## jcline@ieee.org
## Mobile: +1-805-617-0223
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