dimanche, mars 23

The both of you are interpreting the rules way differently. All I need is the gully connection is a Y word. I added the word Yesterday to the gully. I did not even need a sentence. AND the word Yesterday is in the dictionary. I need not have the word Yesterday gully as one. Like there is no Yellowstone Gully!! Its a park. Dictionary.com do not handle two words search e.g purple rain, crazy man etc. Unless it is an AMERICAN named and American in Geography chances are only the popular places in the world will be listed and of course even the extremely obscure ones in the States.

FYI, inverted commas are far more effective than the + sign.

Dictionary .com is american. Of course u can get Yellowstone park ( which is a name too and yes in america). As much as i wanted put Yellowstone park i'd rather Yesterday gully which just so happen to be in Victoria, Australia and its a much easier word and its connection is so blatant. You'd really think the american linguist wanna place sumthin' aussie in an american webbie? My contribution was Yesterday, a word so easily found in any engllish speaking dictionary including the one we are using.