He was facing her, no longer clad in the deep jacket with silver frogging, but now swathed in his trademark black cloak. |
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There is now serious talk of a rethink of all core products, even removing the salt from the company's trademark skinny fries. |
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Two Grenadier guardsmen from the Windsor barracks will be in full scarlet uniform, complete with trademark bearskin headgear. |
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Suddenly and surprisingly, his trademark insincere grin and reflexive eyebrow-raising have come into their own. |
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When it comes to cybersquatting, spoof names, trademark defenses, and legal actions, one of the fee-based services will be necessary. |
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He arrived in the Las Vegas with trademark glitz and glamour carrying all the cards to complete a full house. |
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Aalto's trademark ribs of cobalt blue tiles impart a lively rhythm to the angled wall that faces the bank of elevators. |
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There are gilt-framed paintings, oriental antiques, a sofa in trademark red with cream piping. |
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Although the law now protects companies' trademark when it comes to cybersquatting, registering people's name is still a grey area. |
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Johnson said he had come up with the rollicking piano riffs and trademark rhythm backing Berry's lyrics. |
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His trademark is ready to wear dresses that are light and suitable for any occasion. |
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She insouciantly draws on her parents' conservative attitudes for her routines with a trademark deadpan. |
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The relentless passing style of 'tiki-taka' became Barcelona's trademark towards the end of the last decade. |
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Pool forced a free-kick and Waite thundered a trademark strike in off the bar. |
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He's a huge man who's been a football marketers dream because of his trademark fuzzy black hair. |
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At the end of the game, Eddie always went into the house and prepared his trademark cask of limeade. |
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Wearing his trademark knee-length coat and black hat, the bearded Charlie was his usual relaxed self. |
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But then the Danish toy company is never backward in coming forward in defence of its trademark rights. |
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He plans to set up his company's trademark roasteries and espresso bars in London. |
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He sank back down, closed his mouth and puckered out his thin lower lip in a trademark sulky expression. |
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He talks in that old familiar manner of his, all easy charm and trademark gap-toothed smile. |
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Having a rock-hard stomach is my trademark, and I keep it with exercise and good posture. |
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The trademark roller-coaster narrative has been replaced by something more subtler, more powerful, but lacking none of the ambition or scope. |
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There was once a brashness about Norman, signified by those garish shirts and the trademark wide-brimmed hat. |
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With its trademark big kicks, stabby riffs and chopped-up vocal sound all present, this remix certainly does the damage on the dancefloor. |
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You could have read the trademark on it when I lobbed the ball up to the plate. |
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A trademark 10-minute Booker T and the MGs-style funk jam closes the record, once some jazzy scatting is out of the way. |
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The statue is of a long-haired Lennon sitting casually on a park bench, wearing jeans and his trademark wire-rimmed round glasses. |
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He exhibited his trademark stream-of-consciousness lyrics and scat singing during solos, proving he is as original and innovative as ever. |
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Struggling to suppress his trademark intelligence, he plays a doughy, shambling, lost soul. |
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The reason for the scare quotes around CD is that the term CD is a trademark of the Philips company. |
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His blend of minimal techno and acid has been his trademark sound since the early days. |
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The opposition is pending before the trademark office's trial and appeal board, a spokeswoman said on Thursday. |
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She is sitting on one side of the runway in trademark sunglasses and a bodyguard-protected leather jacket. |
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Since every regular noun has a genitive form, every trademark that has the form of a singular noun has a genitive form too. |
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Wearing a white safari suit and carrying his trademark staff, Taylor looked on as successor Moses Blah was sworn in under heavy security. |
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Below him stands the image of Salim Kumar, the mahout, with his trademark grin and the elephant goad. |
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Gradually the rigidity left his play and the trademark square cut began to beat out a tattoo. |
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The blades are housed in a brass lining and feature the Remington trademark etch and tang stamp. |
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He tangles these loose story lines just tight enough to sustain tension through 500 pages of his trademark Scottish beat prose. |
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The Whites pleaded guilty to five specimen charges of possessing goods with a false trademark for sale or hire. |
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And so begins a good-hearted, extremely cartoony adventure, with Rodriguez's trademark homemade special effects and music. |
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She let me off the hook with grace, respect and her trademark southern charm. |
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Do people recognize your presence because of the scent of your trademark cologne? |
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He eases through country dance songs while adding in his effortlessly impressive trademark guitar solos. |
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Chestnut eyes spotted her trademark wings and he carefully made his way over to her. |
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Subtlety has never been a trademark of the Internet, so don't expect its comedown to be any less tasteful or underscored than its ascension. |
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He is the rock star in all but name, wearing the same lank mane and trademark grungy threads. |
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Where's his old fire, the dismissive rebuke, the sardonic encapsulation, the trademark outspokenness? |
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The result is Say No to the Vendettas, a hearty offering from the band's trademark palette of punk, rockabilly, reggae and dub. |
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Here I will generally use the term trademark and ignore the subtle distinctions of service marks and trade names. |
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As in his westerns, his trademark was contemporary, synthetic sound in compellingly simple settings. |
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Underneath the floppy hair and the trademark goatee, there is a smile playing on his lips, a twinkle in his eye. |
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For instance, there is anthropology's trademark practice of ethnography which entails both fieldwork and writing. |
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Messer portrays her as a dough-faced sad sack who slumps glumly in front of a couple of her trademark paintings of grotesquely buxom women. |
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Then there's Bernov's trademark balalaika-bass, a four-stringed oddity of the first order, pictured above for your amusement. |
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Testino's trademark is the intimacy he attains with his subject and his ability to embody the spirit of the fleeting moment. |
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He has donned conservative business suits, trimmed down, and carefully coifed his gray-specked pompadour trademark hairstyle. |
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In the United States, trademark laws do not allow a generic medicine to look exactly like its brand-name counterpart. |
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However, Rice's trademark grin soon returned when Clough came back struggling manfully with 30 Orange Maid ice lollies. |
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His trademark melodies and lyrics are in a class of their own and his voice expresses emotion like few others can. |
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The tablets can be found in any colour or shape, but are often white with a trademark symbol stamped on them. |
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Older serigraphs do not have the trademark symbols or holographic logo directly on them. |
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He uses his trademark circular breathing method to produce sustained passages of fluent playing. |
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In one shot, an extra is clearly seen to be wearing a Taiga jacket, a trademark of Vancouver circa 1990s or later. |
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Roman Polanski is a director who has almost made cinematic experimentation a trademark. |
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Next door on the wall of Pate's office is an etching of University of Alabama football legend Paul Bryant, wearing his trademark houndstooth hat. |
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The film begins and ends with the artist's trademark colors surrealistically grafted onto scenes of her courtyard. |
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In the individual female competition, the Russian school, with its trademark artistry and excellent choreography, again reigned supreme. |
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How, for example, does one represent the elusive Cheshire cat whose face disappears, leaving only its trademark grin? |
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Yet he made each as distinctively his own as his trademark sunglasses and razor-sharp suits. |
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Denim, linen, suede, and Italian suiting are the media in which his trademark sensibility for opulent detail is expressed. |
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Would their children chalk it in doorways before they knew its meaning as a trademark? |
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Even the specials menus, advertising milkshakes, egg creams and the Lakeview's trademark breakfast pizza are still chalked onto the wall. |
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Even his trademark style now reads more like a pastiche than a stylistic innovation. |
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The trademark guitars can still get in a strop, but mariachi horns and orchestral flourishes evoke Cinerama's widescreen dramas. |
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Just as routinely, artists are now the recipients of cease-and-desist letters from trademark owners claiming infringement. |
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The arsonist's trademark is to set light to conifer trees and wheelie bins, but lighted paper has also been pushed through a cat flap. |
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He was warm, witty and faced each day armed with a brace of one-liners and a trademark cheeky grin. |
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Taking the stage in the early evening sunlight in their trademark masks and olive jumpsuits, they both enthralled and amused festival-goers. |
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Fair enough, but will John be swapping his trademark car coat for this sartorial essential of the new age? |
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Sitting alone on the stage with only his trademark flask of tea and his pipe for company, the old boy positively exudes optimism. |
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Carle's trademark artwork is enhanced by acetate overlays behind which the fish are camouflaged in an effect that is very beautiful. |
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While often sad and grim, the book is nevertheless sprinkled with the author's trademark humor. |
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Wigan fans will always remember the trademark little shuffle and an explosive burst for a long-range try. |
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Once a trademark has become generic, it must remain available for all to use. |
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Two men and two women have been questioned over trademark violation and benefits fraud allegations. |
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Liu's non-figurative paintings embody an extreme intensity which has become a trademark style of this talented painter. |
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Confident, bullhorn in hand, Nagesh has not strayed from his trademark lack of slick editing and fast camera movements in the sequel. |
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Tolkan lends his trademark bulldog intensity, while Monk gives her characters quirky grace and a hint of pranksterish glee. |
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He was a very well versed man and his warm smile was a trademark of his personality. |
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And he has repaid that faith in spades, humility and understatement his trademark all season, on and off the field. |
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The trademark sound of his instruments had been cheaply reproduced on digital synthesisers and he had lost control of his brand name. |
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He is a utility player who has quickly impressed Reds bosses with his cheery personality and trademark smile. |
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A newborn rosie somewhat resembles a gray-speckled trout, with only a hint of the trademark pink breast. |
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His trademark bowler hat and striped waistcoat have been part of his image for most of his enduring career. |
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His one physical quirk, the sandals which he always wears with socks seem more trademark than style choice. |
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The service was also superb, with the Royal Cliff's noiseless way of slipping a chair under the waiting bottom almost a trademark. |
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I find Woodward's breathless you-are-there insider accounts written in his trademark leaden prose to be virtually unreadable. |
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But he did it with a trademark smarm and overpowering obnoxiousness that left Giblets coming back for more! |
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Or the leader you have been watching all the while on the idiot box, with his trademark election smile and hands joined in a namaste. |
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It premiered in 1993 and while it showcases Ball's trademark ability with dialogue, the play's plot is somewhat unfocused. |
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But they all have the trademark short hair, round muscular build and large powerful jaws. |
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But his trademark hard, accurate outlet passes, his ability to skate the puck out of trouble and his wicked slap shot are back. |
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She is younger then, the trademark dark hair bobbed rather than cropped, the intelligent, dark eyes serious and intense. |
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He flashes his trademark smile, all the while mugging to the camera as if every bug-eyed move were a thousand dollar check. |
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A gents' hairdresser has got the barber's blues after thieves swiped the trademark poles which have stood outside his salon for 50 years. |
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He is frequently encountered wearing his trademark Ulster coat, deerstalker cap, and a long cravat tightly wrapped around his neck. |
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That blinding, boyish grin, his trademark of the last two decades, now is reserved for moments of morbidly twisted humour. |
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And three years ago Elizabeth Taylor briefly abandoned her trademark black bouffant for shocking silver, and what an impact it made. |
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The jerkiness of their sound was rougher than usual and their trademark flamboyancy was a little deflated. |
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That determined modesty, backed by his love of Aberdonian parsimony, is a key personal trademark. |
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Jimmy Saville, in trademark shell suit, made his entrance through the audience like a boxer, arms above his head. |
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Gayle, usually the flamboyant strokemaker, played a subdued innings with only rare sightings of his trademark drives and cuts. |
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He was now dejected and devoid of his trademark bow tie, which was a clue from the wardrobe department that he was a dastardly dandy. |
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The veteran striker powered home two trademark headers within two minutes in the final quarter of an hour to spare his side's blushes. |
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Another trademark of this religion is their really silly music which sounds like a cross between the polka and a Mexican Mariachi band on crank. |
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A subsequent glance revealed Matthew McCaslin's trademark meandering networks of electrical conduits, wires, cables, monitors and video players. |
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For example, Jell-O Oreo Pudding launched in May 2001, uses the Nabisco Oreo brand name and the Jello-O trademark. |
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Fresh off being named to his fifth Pro Bowl, Moss sported a new look by letting out his trademark cornrows into a wild Afro hairstyle. |
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A trademark jink and artful cross paved the way for a goal that hauled Everton back into an encounter in which they were 2-0 down. |
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It was back in 1790 that Guinness began to produce what was to become its trademark product, a rich dark porter that came to be known as stout. |
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She's done so through her now trademark silhouettes, large black paper cut-outs set against stark white walls. |
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Weirdness, particularly sexy weirdness, is a trademark of the French film director. |
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The statue, created by sculptor Tom Murphy, shows a striding Lennon wearing his trademark round glasses and a casual suit. |
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The ease with which electronic content can be copied and reproduced raises a multitude of copyright, trademark, database and passing off issues. |
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He has eliminated much of the trademark junk food from his diet, drinks copious amounts of water, and eats salads. |
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How do you do a possessive of a registered trademark that is itself already a possessive? |
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Burberry has a flip-flop with its trademark plaid encased in a clear plastic footbed. |
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Wilkes' trademark vocal sound is a dry megaphone rasp, and he alternates it with savage harmonica outbursts. |
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His beard flowed like a frozen waterfall, and from the rear of his trademark forage cap a radio antenna pointed straight up at the sky. |
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Tse's boyish look, bolstered by his trademark floppy forelocks, is a crucial signpost from the very beginning. |
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A trademark of Roger Whittaker's performances was a very distinctive ability as a natural whistler. |
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He plays Celtic whistle, didgeridoo, panpipes, flute and bass flute in his trademark blend of Celtic, classical, jazz and folk music. |
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For a few minutes scores of protesters, wearing trademark black clothes and gas masks, trashed a branch of the Credito Italiano bank. |
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There are the trademark Tarantino touches like the pop culture references and crackerjack dialogue. |
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His performance is deeply moving, but also crackles with his trademark ranting and raving. |
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When she discarded the Afrocentric style that was her early trademark, record executives were dismayed. |
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It was only in 1994, after arduous negotiations, that Bayer reacquired its trademark. |
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Somehow, his voice has been shorn of its trademark vibrato and rendered unrecognisable. |
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The keystone of a strong trademark policy is proper selection of trademarks. |
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The chairman wore his now trademark open-necked blue shirt, blue blazer and khakis. |
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He was wearing a suit, his tie in one of those enormous Windsor knots, but his trademark red beard was scraggly as always. |
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The trademark creakiness was gone, replaced by an infectious energy and vitality sorely lacking in most musicals of the time. |
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This meant that even if the company went into receivership, the trademark would still belong to the family. |
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The trademark yellow milk jugs are manufactured on site by the dairy's own blow-molding operation. |
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His trademark cold, monotone delivery and crotchety attitude has often been imitated but never matched. |
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He was wearing his official white and black club tracksuit and trademark woolly hat. |
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Hathaway milk churns were made from wood, and were fitted with a trademark red iron plate. |
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He hopped about energetically, did the trademark Edwin moves, played congas and really worked the crowd. |
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A trademark is registered officially, and protects by law a name, symbol, sound, colour or design, which identifies the product in question. |
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Coach Rick Pitino has abandoned his trademark full-court press, challenging his players to do it mane-a-mano. |
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You could register it as a trademark or service mark, but in this case, for what? |
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The same symbol might function as a trademark, a service mark and a trade name, depending on the context in which it is used. |
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They were to make a joint application with the Plaintiff for the registered trademark. |
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Remediation is a trademark characteristic of weblogs but it is hardly a new idea. |
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Their distinctive, close-harmony singing became their trademark and survived musical fashion and family rifts. |
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Diane touched her pen to her lips, her trademark sign that the guest has just said something deeply profound. |
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Her most memorable roles are stamped with her trademark characteristics, by turns wry, matey and spikily defiant. |
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The sound is a mile away from the stadium rock that the band would trademark later in their careers. |
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The trademark of Stallion basketball when he was there was 40 minutes of full-court presses and trapping defenses. |
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His hulking figure is customarily clad in baggy jeans, zip-up jackets, and his trademark baseball caps. |
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Fans are used to Young's laid-back stage presence, the hunched shoulders, eyes often masked by cap or hat, the trademark shamble and lurch. |
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He was the bulldozer for college football's most punishing running attack, with the pancake block being his trademark. |
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When a developer asked David Linley to furnish a neo-Georgian house, he gave them his trademark style combined with collectables old and new. |
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Furthermore, his trademark fusion of ornate mysticism and lurid pop-art aesthetics had taken a toehold in New York's art scene as well. |
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In January 2001, Peterman repurchased the rights to his trademark and mailing list. |
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Handheld cameras and quickfire zooms are Soderbergh's trademark, which means the result is incredibly stylish. |
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His trademark are idealized women with extremely tall and slender bodies. |
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With a trademark mix of impro, live music and inventive storytelling, The Chaingang Gang follows Cartoon de Salvo's previous hits Meat and Two Veg and Ladies and Gentlemen. |
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The same confusion of intent infects his trademark stylistic flourishes. |
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His faster songs were rapidly percussive, his slower songs were plaintively rendered in his odd quavering-soprano voice, and they all had that trademark energy. |
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With his trademark single flaxen plait snaking lazily down his jumper, Britain's leading organic gardener certainly appears to practise what he preaches. |
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Raising legal objections to a trademark violation can take 18 months of investigation, so copycats have plenty of time to take advantage of the time gap. |
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The lawsuit claims both cybersquatting and trademark infringement. |
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Even his trademark shaven head is covered in a soft brown fuzz of hair. |
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It was during his college years that he learnt his trademark and highly specialised craft of working with a silk and velvet mix known as devore velvet. |
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The album opens with the group's trademark sound in full effect. |
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The trouble, though, was that Cole Porter had become incapable of turning out a trademark Cole Porter song, with its inimitable mix of eroticism and esprit. |
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When we meet, he is wearing a buttoned up suit and one of the designer's trademark floral shirts, all the while keeping his scarf tied donnishly around his neck. |
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While maintaining their dreamy melodies and laid-back grooves, the duo have deserted their trademark kids' TV samples and the like, for something more grown up. |
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Robbie Blake curled a trademark free kick just wide and then slipped at the crucial moment when he seemed certain to end his worrying goal drought. |
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The mount is one of the trademark positions of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. |
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All the idiosyncrasies for which he was known within his homeland, the hesitant mannerisms and trademark waddle, do not look quite so loveable in the world at large. |
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Leo's trademark vocals are in full force, traversing the usual valleys of gut-wrenching falsetto and perfunctory quavers in resplendent multi-tracked glory. |
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Marrying thought provoking lyrics with great melodies and his trademark acoustic guitar playing, his music is underlined with an acerbic and sometimes sarcastic wit. |
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His voice wasn't weak, but it lacked its trademark strength and energy. |
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Those trademark Smart eye-like dials are there, protruding from the top of the dash, while the rest of the layout is well designed using good quality plastics. |
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The bag pictures Arafat in his trademark kaffiyeh and uniform. |
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His unique style of whoops, whines, and yells became his trademark. |
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Kylie drops her trademark helium trill to adopt a gravelly rasp. |
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Live Earlimart had layers of swirly, feedbacky sound along with their trademark whispery vocals-made for a really intense, compelling performance. |
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In trademark whiteface and Buster Keaton regalia, Viglione pummeled his drums in a murderous rage, while Palmer's full, rich voice created a palpable drama. |
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We said goodbye, and he blew me his trademark exaggerated air kiss. |
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Brown, with his trademark long hair and tweed jackets, had undertaken a well organised campaign to be elected rector, a post unique to Scottish universities. |
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In its simplest terms, a franchise is a license from the owner of a trademark or trade name permitting another to sell a product under that name or mark. |
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And the the Tacoma band lost its trademark claim on the basis of laches. |
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I tried to reach him on Saturday, with the three million texts and phonecalls which are the trademark of my breed of lairy neurotic woman, but he wasn't having it. |
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With its trademark fynbos and renosterveld, forest and other unique plant types, the CFK stretches south from Clanwilliam to Cape Town and then east to Port Elizabeth. |
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It said it didn't have to decide on whether the fact that CGU had filed for a trademark that it should have retrospective rights on everything with that trademark in. |
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She became a household name through her TV show, Relaxing with Roma where she famously sported a leopard-print leotard which became her trademark. |
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None of this has seemed to faze the journalist, who, this fashion season, displayed her trademark ability to excite and infuriate. |
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The right-back, incidentally, isn't wearing his trademark bandana. |
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A Beijing liquor company has applied for trademark registration on a triangular logo made up of likenesses of Japanese Emperors Hirohito and Akihito and crown prince Naruhito. |
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Yet Matisse continued to work in this trademark style, with its emphasis on arabesque lines, bright colors and decoration, throughout his long artistic life. |
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Her trademark long blond bangs strike out at odd angles, whirling to and fro as she speaks. |
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He's surprisingly lucid in comparison to his usual interviews and manages to avoid the trademark doommongering and baseless claims of scientific advance. |
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Grampian also gets a new logo to replace its trademark saltire. |
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It was Jo Gordon's trademark Dr Who scarves that first aroused the magpie eyes of the UK fashion pack three years ago, sounding the first death knell for the soppy pashmina. |
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Yep, aggressive lyrics and guitar riffs, all backed by the trademark thumping drums, with only moments of calm to provide a respite from the headbanging. |
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Her colleagues, in Hooters trademark tank tops and hot pants, all either nodded or laughed. |
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She kicks off with what's fast becoming a Pippa trademark, a brief meditation on the skimpiness of her sportswear. |
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A trademark outfit is vital to sending out the right signals of imperious power as real-life dictators understand all too well. |
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With her basket on the front, streamers on the handlebars, caps in the spokes, banana seat, pegs on the back tire and her trademark horn, I truly loved her. |
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It goes for melodicism with a minimum of the trademark layered opacity. |
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I like to think of it as analogous to a trademark or service mark. |
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Her trademark knitwear combines earthy tones with vivid colourful trims. |
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Commentators failed to agree on whether her dress was the work of Dior or the Lebanese designer Elie Saab, whose trademark is to bespeckle his dresses with diamonds. |
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In Namibia, the northwesterly trade wind is the trademark of August. |
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Dogs and sheep don't mix well, unless it's a highly trained sheepdog and in our experience owners have not been too careful where their animals leave their trademark. |
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Mubarak was present, wheeled in on a hospital trolley and wearing his trademark sunglasses. |
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Navajo Nation once took Urban Outfitters to court for trademark infringement. |
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Then, if you want, you can sue spoofers for trademark infringement. |
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Last week, the U.S. Patent and trademark Office said the Redskins name and logo should not have trademark protection. |
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That's a nod to the raincoat maker that transformed itself from tired to trendy by plastering its trademark plaid on everything from miniskirts to bikinis. |
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Slash's trademark trebly guitar still sounds exactly the same. |
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King, known for his trademark electric hairdo, is perceived by most of the public as a clown-like showman who, though long-winded, is an entertaining character. |
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By the time he approached the turn, he had dispensed with his trademark cap along with the aura of controlled authority he usually brings to a golf course. |
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He sports a trademark black blazer and white shirt at virtually all times. |
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With guitar in hand and mouth organ at the ready, he has created a trademark sound which makes him stand out from your everyday guitar-playing songwriter. |
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Be My Baby is like a modern day acoustic ballad, with melancholic twists and the now trademark falsetto, complete with strings and the mouth organ to begin with. |
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His dad was the average blue-collar worker, a Pittsburgh trademark. |
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The production is coloured by the electro revival of recent years, but also has more dominant dub content, always underlaid with Smith's trademark large, unfiltered bass. |
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Donnie unleashing his trademark flying back kick on the guy is very cool. |
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He floored the audience with his trademark style of narration. |
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The groovy crew of animated bounty hunters makes their way to the big screen, but they lose their trademark snazziness to the limp, overlong plot. |
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The two-door Ford Thunderbird is made available with a power-folding soft top, along with a heated glass rear window or a removable hardtop with trademark porthole windows. |
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The nurse nodded, flashing one of her trademark brilliant smiles. |
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Whether scoring spaghetti westerns or Italian shock, Morricone's trademark seems to be a sound of individualistic spirit, the loner with a distinct purpose. |
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It's made up of all sorts of bits and pieces that no one would otherwise touch, but he's packaged it well and dressed it up with his trademark buffoonery. |
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Initially the company simply wanted to build consumer awareness for its new spiral-bound books, which have a distinctly different look and feel from the trademark product. |
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Blanco attempts his trademark bunny-hop to get past two players. |
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Named Sid by the ranger, the reptile was identified as a non-poisonous Garter snake, a North American species with trademark white strip down the middle and red sides. |
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Robert Jay, qc, arrived at the courthouse early today, looking somber in his trademark yellow-framed glasses. |
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She leans into the tape recorder, her trademark half-smile amped to full. |
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He is dressed in his trademark style, which is to say that he not only looks like the cat's pyjamas, he is wearing them, along with his silk crimson black-lined robe. |
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Her open-wound honesty has made some of her albums heavy going, but here she applies her trademark whispered vocals to her most accessible collection in a decade. |
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Samara responded by sending each of the retailers a cease-and-desist letter and then filing suit against them for copyright and trademark infringement. |
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The atmosphere is laid back, as is the owner Jose, who moves around greeting everyone in his trademark overshirt, surrounded by an air of bonhomie. |
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The choil is sloped, and the top edge of the blade is ramped to accommodate the trademark round hole, and has deep cut notches which give exceptional grip. |
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Once public participation has ended, the election process quickly turns into horse-trading, which seems to have become the trademark of Indonesian politics. |
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It was to be the hosts last flag raiser of the day as McDonald rifled over a trademark swerver to send his team six clear with six minutes left to play. |
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Feeling the claps of a hand on his shoulder Ben turned and could not resist a smile as Jack took out his trademark deck of cards and shuffled it in mid air. |
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A misguided foray into middle-eastern politics, it may well be their lyrical nadir, their trademark synth-pop swamped in a hideous 80s production. |
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Of course, Gosnell did not suggest that DA or any other dictionary include a subentry for coke to accompany that for the trademark. |
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Pirated compact discs are a trademark of busy intersections in Latin America. |
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At left, Beavon applies the trademark Monroe beauty mark to her cheek in preparation for a public appearance. |
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Protection of an insignia in terms of trademark law requires registration by the trademark authorities. |
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Interliant is a registered trademark and INIT Solutions Suite and Soft Link are trademarks of Interliant, Inc. |
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The Scot then broke for 2-1 with a trademark backhand pass but Verdasco hit straight back when Murray netted a backhand. |
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Two photofits have been issued of him, one with his trademark sunglasses and one without. |
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However, it is still a registered trademark of Bayer in more than 80 other countries, including Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Switzerland. |
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He felt their sounds and captured them with extraordinary draftsmanship in his trademark watercolors. |
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To protect its trademark Chevron has one station in each state it owns the rights to branded as Standard. |
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The Swedish striker stunned supporters by getting his trademark dreadlocks chopped off on Friday. |
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In many countries, a trademark receives protection without registration, but registering a trademark provides legal advantages for enforcement. |
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The suspense and the gallows humour that had become Hitchcock's trademark in his films continued to appear in his American productions. |
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Not only could Skippy understand humans, but this female eastern grey kangaroo could communicate back with her trademark 'tchk tchk tchk' noise. |
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Thus, Webster's became a genericized trademark and others were free to use the name on their own works. |
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Usually made from a short pastry with almonds or milk chocolate, they symbolize the Antwerp trademark and folklore. |
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A perfume's scent is not eligible for trademark protection because the scent serves as the functional purpose of the product. |
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In 1963, Stewart adopted the Mod lifestyle and look, and began fashioning the spiky rooster hairstyle that would become his trademark. |
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Design Verifier is based on the Prover Plug-In, a trademark of Prover Technology AB in Sweden, the United States, and in other countries. |
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Mojix, Mojix STAR, Mojix eGroup, and Mojix eLocation are registered trademark or trademarks of Mojix Inc. |
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For lightness, Zagato pioneered the use of Perspex and of aerodynamics, with trademark forms such as the split or stub tail. |
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The cover is one of their most minimalist designs, with a stark white brick wall, and no trademark or band name. |
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He had a trademark of twisted chimney stacks, many of which can be seen on the buildings in the city centre. |
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But these marks are not immediately protectable and at best will only be the subject of relatively narrow trademark rights. |
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The survey, which appears in the March 2006 issue of MIP, ranks firms in the categories of trademark and copyright representation. |
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There are attractive ornamental items and a selection of kitchen miscellanea together with her trademark walking sticks. |
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The sound of Tarzans trademark trumpeting, often abruptly terminated by a fall from a lamp post doubling as tree. |
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Elements from these works show up in her fiction, much of which is written with her trademark sense of agnostic humanism. |
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Mity-Lite is a trademark of Mity Enterprises in the United States and other countries. |
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Schuh claimed Shhh was too similar, would confuse the public and infringed their trademark. |
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He is particularly recognised for his trademark matchstick men depicted in industrial landscapes. |
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Massively Parallel Technologies is a trademark of Massively Parallel Technologies, Inc. |
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The drama overshadowed a game that cried out for a little shimmy of the hips, a step-over or a trademark body swerve. |
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But Posh is having her trademark catsuits remade because she's so thin now. |
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The attachment holds two examples of cease and desist letters in the field of trademark law showing typically pre-worded clauses. |
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Predicted to be a big seller this season and costing pounds 1,445 were a pair of Louboutin black thigh boots, complete with trademark red soles. |
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The lot features one of his trademark raincoats, a sharply tailored three-piece suit and a tie. |
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While he has battled plantar fasciitis for the past five weeks, Bryant has insisted his trademark explosiveness would show signs of returning. |
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Design Plus will be responsible for creatively enhancing the image of the family of SPAM brands for trademark purposes. |
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He projects a terrifying intensity that disperses the moment he cracks his trademark grin. |
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Included in the basic trademark protection package is the added feature of search engine and online directory submission of trademarked names. |
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Sunich from using the Paul Frank trademark or tradename to start a new business. |
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Gabrielle caught the imagination with her distinctive vocals and trademark eye patch. |
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Solomon, and Jung also filed a countersuit responding to claims by BLK that they had infringed the company's trademark rights. |
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The tea, also known as saloop, is pink in color and has the trademark sassafras scent. |
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And boyo it's highly amusing to see Ex Factor flop Mr Jones attempting to maintain his trademark cockiness after crashing and burning in America. |
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