How to search for words ending with me or any other domain name extensions
With all the rush and chaos for booking fancy .me domain names since yesterday, I decided to do a quick search on finding some cool words ending with ‘me’. I found two cool tools that will do the work for us.
The first one is More Words. Simply enter ‘*me’ in its search box and it gives you a list of 407 words ending with ‘me’. Examples: time, summertime, slime, overcome, and so on.
The next tool is WordNavigator. On a similar search on the site for words ending with ‘me’, it came out with a list of 647 words.
Now with more domain name extensions coming up, I am sure webmasters and domain name buyers will want to play around with these tools, if they aren’t already.
Out of curiosity, I did a search of words ending with ‘in’ (.in is the India domain extension) on WordNaigator and it threw up a list of 1,148 words. Bin, aborigin, begin, coin, dioxin, wherein, wolfskin, ……anybody interested?
By the way, in case you want to play around more and come up with names like del.icio.us and blo.gs, check this nice domain finder tool.


I'm a marketing communications consultant and a web 2.0 enthusiast based out of New Delhi, India. I also write at 



18. July 2008 at 13:04
[...] On a similar search on the site for words ending with ‘me’, it came out with a More here: How to search for words ending with me or any other domain name extensions Read the rest of the [...]
18. July 2008 at 15:55
I like both the services you mentioned but neither provides placenames or proper nouns, so no “Rome” or “Salome” in the results. They use American English dictionaries too, which can be limiting for people in other markets.
Another way of searching for keywords is to use the dictionaries built into Linux. A quick grep will find the results you want:
grep -e ‘me$’ /usr/share/dict/british-english
18. July 2008 at 16:05
Thanks Andymurd. Good one.
18. July 2008 at 16:37
[...] Идея. Частичный перевод: Усатый Станислав [...]
18. July 2008 at 21:56
Good post… click here to read more
21. July 2008 at 01:30
Thanks for the interesting post.
http://www.decisioncare.org
22. July 2008 at 15:09
wow, cool!