Different sites have different standards for how a question should be written, tagged, and otherwise presented. As such, questions need to be tailored for the particular site that they are being asked on, and part of this tailoring process is deciding which group of experts you want to answer your question—database experts? English language experts? programmers? linguists? Simply mirroring the question on multiple sites would prevent users from being able to adapt their questions to the site they want to ask on, which is an important step in asking a good question.
Furthermore, different sites have different standards for what is and what is not on-topic. I suspect that English word requests are not on-topic for Database Administrators, even though the words are vaguely related to databases. Certainly, this question (and questions like it) would not be on-topic for Stack Overflow. Which suggests another problem with this approach: you wanted to "share" this question with the Database Administrators site without knowing if the question is even on-topic there! It's not hard to imagine how that could go wrong. This is the same reason why migration paths are heavily restricted: because users of one site don't necessarily know what is suitable for other sites on the network.
You also need to consider the logistical problems. (And no, I don't just mean the difficulty of implementing it, but that is a consideration.) What I mean is, for example, which site owns the question? That matters because it determines who gets to edit the question, whose standards/guidelines apply, whose tags get used, what happens if it gets closed (or who has the privileges to close it), etc. etc.