- Source: CYM
- Source: .cym
- ISO 3166-1
- Daftar perbedaan kode negara IOC, FIFA, dan ISO 3166
- Kesendirian
- Kode negara: C
- Fédération Internationale Féline
- Bahasa Wales Patagonia
- Kimosin
- Daftar bahasa menurut ISO 639-2
- Bahasa Wales
- Bettina Heinen-Ayech
- CYM
- .cym
- CYMS Football Association
- Connolly Youth Movement
- Paweł Cyms
- CYM RFC
- Welsh language
- Navacaprant
- Chuang Yen Monastery
- Pobol y Cwm
Organisations
Choctaw Youth Movement, a Choctaw nationalist party and grassroots movement in Oklahoma
Connolly Youth Movement, an Irish Marxist–Leninist youth group
Centre for Young Musicians, London
Spilka Ukraïns'koï Molodi (Спілка української молоді), the Ukrainian Youth Association
CYM RFC, a Rugby Club in Dublin, Ireland
Standardised codes
Cayman Islands, by ISO 3166-1 country code
Welsh language or Cymraeg, by ISO 639 language code
.cym, an unused top-level Internet domain
Chatham Seaplane Base, United States, by IATA airport code
Other uses
Cym, the Cymbidium orchid genus
CYM, the CMYK color model, in printing
.cym is a GeoTLD reserved for eventual assignment to the Cayman Islands. The primary top-level domain used by the Cayman Islands is .ky. The Islands already have the international three letter code, CYM. ICANN plans to increase the number of generic top-level domains, and it is through this process that a .cym top-level domain might be awarded.
The Cayman Islands were previously in competition with Wales over use of the top-level domain. A campaign named "dot.CYM", not overly supported at government level, sought to have the .cym suffix for websites concerning Wales (Welsh: Cymru), the Welsh language (Welsh: Cymraeg) and Welsh culture. However, .cym was eventually assigned to the Cayman Islands because ICANN's policy states that new applications for 3-letter domains will not be accepted if they match existing ISO 3-letter codes. Wales was eventually granted the domain .cymru.
.cymru and .wales
In June 2012, ICANN opened the process of applications for new top level domains. Nominet, who own the .uk TLD, applied to ICANN for both .cymru and .wales.