What is the difference between trademark and aol?
trademark | aol |
As a adjective trademark is (informal) distinctive, characteristic, signature. As a noun trademark is a word, symbol, or phrase used to identify a particular company's product and differentiate it from other companies' products. As a verb trademark is to register something as a trademark.
trademark Adjective
(-)
(informal) distinctive, characteristic, signature
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 15
, author=Owen Phillips
, title=Stoke 2 - 0 Fulham
, work=BBC Sport
citation
, page=
, passage=Riise did crash a fantastic, trademark free-kick against the bar from 25 yards but it was the Potters who increasingly posed the greater threat.}}
Noun
( en noun)
A word, symbol, or phrase used to identify a particular company's product and differentiate it from other companies' products.
Any proprietary business, product or service name.
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Related terms
* registered trademark
* service mark
* wordmark
See also
* brand
Verb
( en verb)
To register something as a trademark.
To so label a product.
Usage notes
Among practitioners of trademark law, it is generally considered incorrect to use “trademark” as a verb; the preferred terminology would be to use'' a trademark or to ''register a trademark.
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aol Anagrams
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