I find the different listings that loosely use "detailed" or "fine details" to be rather amusing. I ran into one this evening on ebay where the seller apparently thinks that description is the same as "detailing" a car. Some of the coins still had cloth fiber sticking to them in the photos. There was another thread earlier this week about the broad use of very specific descriptions (bu, choice bu, gem). What other somewhat angle-y descriptions/sales techniques are rampant?
Every time I see "high grade" to describe a coin with obvious wear(like not even AU) that was recently harshly dipped I die a little. Sometimes I have to double check to make sure I'm not mixing up my Key Dates as well..
For some coins, AU is high grade. But, yeah, mostly misused. My favorite is "better coin," from a certain dealer on eBay who seemingly things every coin gets undergraded by the TPGs.
I laugh whenever I see the seller say, "XF45 WITH DETAILS!" As if the details are an added bonus that come free with the coin. I've always wanted to list a coin saying, "AU details WITH FREE CORROSION!"
There was a world coin seller on eBay that always described his AU~Unc coins as "bright, clean, fresh.."
One of the B&M shops here uses terms to represent actual grades on his ebay store. Medium grade- means Fine or Very Fine High Grade- means Extremely Fine Very High Grade- means About Unc BU - usually means Ms60-Ms62 Gem BU - is MS63 or higher Every Peace/Morgan $ MS63 or above gets described as Gem BU FROM ORIGINAL ROLL That has to be false advertising, he doesnt know for sure where those coins originated