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i would guess probably not.
the silver shop
Rather than trademark a business, you would trademark its marks used in trade: name, logo, slogan, etc.
Paul Revere was a silversmith from Boston Massachusetts, some accoplishments are that he said that "the british are coming, the british are coming" and if Pual Revere, William Dawes, and and Samuel Prescott didn't go around at midnight and say that we would be ruled by Britain right now.
You would contact the trademark issuer in your country for the applicable forms and fees.
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 have a photograph of an iPhone, there is copyright on the photo itself, belonging to the photographer unless other arrangements were made. If the phone is on, each visible icon would be protected by trademark, but most common uses of the photograph would not infringe the trademark. The name iPhone is protected by trademark, but most common uses of it, for example in this question and answer, would not infringe the trademark.
It would more likely be a trademark, but there is no record for it in USPTO's Trademark Electronic Search System.
It would be fraud to make such a claim. Only the owner of the trademark can make such a claim.
You would be more likely to want to trademark it. See below for current US trademark fees.
They don't! They would dress smartly to meet customers but they don't have uniforms as such.
trademark