Absolutely; however the majority of uses require permission from the copyright holder.
One must apply to the copyright holder for permisson to use their copyrighted item.
A patent or trademark is applied for directly to the US Patent and Trademark office. You must submit drawings, descriptions, and other paperwork proving you have an idea or change to an existing idea that would make the product or item uniquely your own. You are then given a patent number that forbids anyone to use your idea without your permission for a specific period of time, depending on the item. There are also fees involved. A copyright can be issued one of two ways. You can apply for an ISBN number through the Library of Congress or you can simply publish your work. Even putting the copyright symbol on a picture or text is your mark that you are forbidding anyone else to use it without your express permission. But if you are ever pushed into proving you own something in print, you need to be able to date your first copyright of the item. This also is beginning to include internet postings like the one you're reading now.
If a work to which you hold the rights has been uploaded without your permission, use the link below.
The copyright holder, or anyone the copyright holder authorizes.
no.BUT! if you have an move called fling.In a battle you can use it fling you get to throw the item your Pokemon is holding.WARNING:you will never ever have that item again if you use fling.
Use the latest copyright date.
Without a license, yes. Of course, a more accurate answer would depend upon what the item is, how you obtained a copy and how you intend to use it. For example, it is perfectly legal to use an authorized copy of copyrighted items for your own personal use, in private. Similarly, you may use copyrighted items of various types in a non-profit classroom without permission of the copyright owners.
no
You may use copyright protected material when you are the copyright holder, or when you have permission from the rightsholder or an exemption in the law. The most notable exemption is fair use or fair dealing, which allows certain limited unlicensed uses in situations such as education and commentary.
I don't think it is possible to copyright a name. If the person gets the name approved, I don't think anyone can sue over it.
With permission from the copyright holder, yes.
yeah. well - u can use, like, a very rare gem and 2 normal gems cos that's still a rare item. i don't think it's possible 2 use all very rare gems!