™ = hold alt while typeing 0153, then let go of alt. the 0 makes a diffrence.
Yes, the word 'Microsoft' is a proper noun, the name of a specific company (Microsoft Corporation).
A trademark is a symbol of ownership which recognizes a brand/logo. For example Microsoft may have a trademark for Xbox stopping anyone from using the 'Xbox' name or 'Microsoft' name.
Microsoft Word 2010 is the name of the 2010 version of a word processing application developed by Microsoft.
Heinz does not have copyright on the word Heinz, but it does have a trademark on the name.
There really isn't one: trademark is a very specific word covering marks used in trade.
microsoft carporetion
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. 1914. Trademark name.
Microsoft Word is the main one they created, but there is also a word processor as part of Works, another Microsoft creation.
If you mean the meaning of the title then there isn't one. Microsoft is the company that created it and it is a word processing software. hence the name Microsoft Word.
What you are describing is a trademark. A trademark can be a word, phrase, symbol, logo, design or image. Companies do not buy the trademark but register it so no one else can use it without their permission.
The name of the game of manhunt is not capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence (including within quotes) or is being used as a brand name or trademark of some sort. Monopoly is a trademark, and so Monopoly should be capitalized, but soccer and manhunt should not be.
Microsoft Word