A mark is generic if it is the common name for the product. A mark is descriptive if it describes a purpose, nature, or attribute of the product. A mark is suggestive if it suggests or implies a quality or characteristic of the product. A mark is arbitrary if it is a real English word that has no relation to the product. A mark is fanciful if it is an invented word.

<example>
Q: The mark "Ivory" for a product made of elephant tusks. What is the type of mark?
A: generic
</example>

<example>
Q: The mark "Tasty" for bread. What is the type of mark?
A: descriptive
</example>

<example>
Q: The mark "Caress" for body soap. What is the type of mark?
A: suggestive
</example>

<example>
Q: The mark "Virgin" for wireless communications. What is the type of mark?
A: arbitrary
</example>

<example>
Q: The mark "Aswelly" for a taxi service. What is the type of mark?
A: fanciful
</example>

Q: {{text}} What is the type of mark? Reply with either: generic, descriptive, suggestive, arbitrary, fanciful
A: