There are hundreds of trademarks including the word "lollipop" around the world. In the US alone, there are wines, toy horses, tape recorders, restaurants, book clubs, online seminars, and photo editing services called Lollipop. In Germany there is a plant vendor and a perfume company; in Korea, there is a phone; in Austria, there is a line of children's clubs in malls; in Japan, there is a designer of computer games; in France, a line of cosmetics; and in Sweden, hair accessories.
There are thousands of trademarks that include the word "candy," but the word itself is not distinctive enough to be trademarked; it would be categorized as "merely descriptive."
Trademark because it has the "r" with the circle after the title, which means it is federally registered as a trademark. If it was copyrigh, it would have the "c" with the circle.
If you control the trademark, yes.
yes the "Bootspark"tiruvalla is a trademark registered firm
Yes, It is a registered federal trademark in the United States, You can Search the Entire Federal Trademark Database free, here: Trademarks411.com | Trademark Search OnlineHope it will helpThanks
No. Actually, the superscript TM is for designating trademarks in the US that have not yet been registered with the USPTO. If/when you get the trademark registered with the USPTO, you would use the ® instead.
It's not required to use the trademark or registered trademark symbols, and some designers feel it clutters the look of the packaging.
Yes.
Yes; it is registered to Goodluck Worldwide.
Yes Johnny Cupcakes is a registered trademark.
Yes; it was registered by Dow Chemical in 1946.
A search of the Trademark Electronic Search System (TESS) at the US Patent and Trademark Office website does not show a registered trademark for "Stickman Records" in the US. However there are two companies with that name, operating in Germany and Canada, and they may be registered as trademarks in their respective countries.
The symbol capital R within a circle [®], or circled capital letter R, is the registered trademark symbol. This indicates that the product is registered with a national trademark office (ex: Registered, U.S. Patent and Trademark Office). If a trademark is not officially registered, then it will be marked with a superscript TM (in capitals).