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cheap or discount?

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If both 'cheap' and 'discount' prefix domains are available, which would you recommend buying.

For example, if the following 'discount' versions were available for £1k each (all .co.uk), would you consider this a good price:

discountcars, discountlaptops, discountflights, discountinsurance, discounttvs

Is there a big value difference between the two, 'cheap' and 'discount'?
 
For example, if the following 'discount' versions were available for £1k each (all .co.uk), would you consider this a good price:

discountcars, discountlaptops, discountflights, discountinsurance, discounttvs

I think discount will always be second to cheap in most cases but it's still a decent prefix.

discountflights sold a few hours ago for £1020, the bidders were mainly people from this forum, so I'd call that a reseller/investment price rather than an end user price:

http://domainlore.co.uk/auctions/id/894

Grant
 
Thanks for the replies. If £1k is a reseller/investment price for these domains, what could the end user price potentially be?
 
Note from a traditional marketing point of view, discount can be better than cheap, e.g. which sounds better discounthotels or cheaphotels? I'd say discounthotels, as cheap can have poor connotations.

Rgds
 
Using the above example by grantw, 'discountflights sold a few hours ago for £1020', what could this fetch from a reseller compared to an end user?
 
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