05-31-2022 12:35 PM - edited 05-31-2022 12:38 PM
To all selling on Ebay. I have seen many listings using the word "lot" to sell a single item. Sorry, but this is incorrect. By definition, lot means three or more (but often less than many).
05-31-2022 12:42 PM
Lot is used by many auction sellers to identify a listing. Auction houses from the beginning of time will list lot 1 lot 2 lot 3 etc.
Yes, some use it as keyword to get folks to look at an item. To say its incorrect is not incorrect to me.
Annoying to some who are looking for a lot, meaning three or more very true.
05-31-2022 12:48 PM
@pursuit40 wrote:To all selling on Ebay. I have seen many listings using the word "lot" to sell a single item. Sorry, but this is incorrect. By definition, lot means three or more (but often less than many).
Every in-person auction I have ever been to assigns a "lot number" to everything being sold, whether it is a single item or multiple.
Christie's calls a single item a "lot".
So does Sotheby's.
05-31-2022 12:53 PM
@pursuit40 wrote:To all selling on Ebay. I have seen many listings using the word "lot" to sell a single item. Sorry, but this is incorrect. By definition, lot means three or more (but often less than many).
What's wrong with a 'lot of two'? You are stating that you have two identical items in one sale and not two identical items to sell separately.
05-31-2022 12:54 PM - edited 05-31-2022 12:56 PM
In the auction trade, anything offered as a single unit for bidding is a "lot," so a lot may be one item or a group of items. Put another way, If it's one unit on which people are bidding, it is a "lot" no matter how many objects it comprises.
Many people continue to use auction terminology on eBay, for many reasons -- some better than others -- and that is not going to go away.
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05-31-2022 01:08 PM
sorry but
05-31-2022 01:42 PM
No lot of two?
05-31-2022 01:45 PM
@chapeau-noir wrote:No lot of two?
Exactly - I use "lot" with 2 or more items for sale together.
What is disappointing about that?
05-31-2022 01:47 PM
By definition, a lot of three or more is a "Hugh Lot!!!!!!!!!!!"
05-31-2022 01:50 PM
@chapeau-noir wrote:By definition, a lot of three or more is a "Hugh Lot!!!!!!!!!!!"
Don't exaggerate---that's just a "big lot".
05-31-2022 01:50 PM
I often search in World Coins; Collections & Lots. It is filled with single coin listing
I think maybe that's the kind of thing the OP is talking about, not auction lots
Started in auctioneering in 1978 so I'm familiar with the term, we used Lot # to keep track of who belonged to what
05-31-2022 01:55 PM
This topic seems to be drawing a LOT of attention
05-31-2022 02:21 PM
@chapeau-noir wrote:By definition, a lot of three or more is a "Hugh Lot!!!!!!!!!!!"
Also by definition, is OP saying that Lot's wife was married to three or more guys?
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05-31-2022 02:32 PM
OK, so Hugh was one of them, what were the other guys names?
05-31-2022 02:48 PM
@maxine*j wrote:
@chapeau-noir wrote:By definition, a lot of three or more is a "Hugh Lot!!!!!!!!!!!"
Also by definition, is OP saying that Lot's wife was married to three or more guys?
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All of them named Lot - for that was her Lot in life.