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If I understand you correctly then no - its a different domain, and thats how he would see it. The public are also used to hearing the .co.uk extension. If he wants bikes.uk he'd have to buy it, even if he already owned bikes.co.uk. He also wouldn't be bothered if completely different people owned bikes.org.uk and bikes.me.uk and bikes.com, which they do, as these are different domain names.
Then, bluntly, your client has no real understanding of how online business works.
There is already KNOWN confusion between .co.uk and .com.
The potential for confusion between .co.uk and .uk is orders of magnitude higher as they are far more similar.
That means that every single time your client advertises bikes.uk, they will also be sending some potential customers to the owner of bikes.co.uk (and likewise the owner of bikes.co.uk will be sending customers to bikes.uk). This is INEVITABLE. It's not "an opinion because I said so", it's a fact. The issue of confusion is known and understood.
The same ugly problem rears its way at the level of email addresses. Somebody is working on a deal to buy 5,000 bikes from your client at the wholesale level, then keys in [email protected] (easy to do it's the most familiar web address, after all) and sends the final proposal with costs, stats and projections straight to the sales team of your largest competitor.
Now imagine the same thing happening (across other domains) to sensitive information of any kind (hospital records, crime reports, financial details, legal advice, witness protection records etc.) and you will hopefully see the potential for a vast increase in the number of privacy breaches and loss of trade secrets.
Of course your client doesn't care about bikes.org.uk or bikes.me.uk - those extensions mean very little to most consumers. But everyone's familiar with .co.uk, as Nominet's "Domain Business Reports" have clearly demonstrated http://db.nominet.org.uk/ - and for the first time ever there's a direct UK-specific, business-targeted competitor to that extension.
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