No. If an image is trademarked for anything, you need specific permission from the owner of the image in order to use it. No matter what you use the image for, the owner of the image can still sue you for copyright infringement (I've seen it happen).
The word "image" has several somewhat unrelated meanings. It may refer to a picture; however, it can also refer to a copy of computer data. For example, a computer file that contains a copy of all the information of a CD is said to be an "image" of the CD.
Either copy & paste, or by giving the "Insert - Image" command.
On a computer? Highlight over the text you want to copy and right click then copy or ctrl+C. For an image, right click on the image and click copy.
Photographers will keep a copy of the image without the watermark. If they have given you the rights to the image or permission to use the image without the watermark then they will provide you with that copy.
By right clicking on the image and going to "copy image location", or "copy image URL."
You will want to right click on the image and select the copy option in the box that appears. If you do not know how to do this an alternative is to select the image, then press on 'Edit' followed by 'Copy'.
The same image of something
Just tpye in moving pictures in google and then copy the image by right clicking and click on copy image
right click copy or highlight it
An image is a copy of an object fromed by reflected (or refracted) rays of light.
Scan results in an image of your document being sent to your computer whereas copy puts an image of your original on paper.
No, those are all completely optional at the owner's discretion. BTW "copy written" isn't a word -- it's spelled "copyrighted".