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trademark
[ treyd-mahrk ]
noun
- any name, symbol, figure, letter, word, or mark adopted and used by a manufacturer or merchant in order to designate specific goods and to distinguish them from those manufactured or sold by others. A trademark is proprietary and is usually registered with the Patent and Trademark Office to assure its exclusive use by its owner or licensee.
- a distinctive mark or feature particularly characteristic of or identified with a person or thing (often used attributively):
her trademark wit and sarcasm.
verb (used with object)
- to stamp or otherwise place a trademark designation upon.
- to register the trademark of.
trademark
/ 藞迟谤别瑟诲藢尘蓱藧办 /
noun
- the name or other symbol used to identify the goods produced by a particular manufacturer or distributed by a particular dealer and to distinguish them from products associated with competing manufacturers or dealers. A trademark that has been officially registered and is therefore legally protected is known as a Registered Trademark
- any distinctive sign or mark of the presence of a person or animal
verb
- to label with a trademark
- to register as a trademark
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of trademark1
Example Sentences
Her trademark wit and sincerity are firmly in place, as she talks candidly about social anxiety, crises of confidence, infantilised men, her least favourite sexual positions and being beaten down for speaking up.
Because Marple and Poirot are trademarked by a watchful Christie estate, there have been no new stories added to the originals; they are just adapted, again and again, sometimes faithfully, often very loosely.
LL gave him one of his trademark hats as a parting gift.
鈥淢e Talk Pretty One Day鈥 is Sedaris at his best and brightest as he recounts his childhood, travels and growth as a writer with trademark wit and humor.
Meanwhile, Beautiful Things singer Benson Boone surprised the crowd by bringing out Sir Brian May for a rendition of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody while executing a trademark front flip.
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