Discriminating marks; signs; tokens; indications; appearances.
Scienta is from the Latin "scientia", meaning knowledge.
The word 'meaning' is the present participle, present tense of the verb to mean. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective and a gerund (a verbal noun).Examples:He was meaning to call her. (verb)It was a well meaning gesture. (adjective)The meaning is not clear. (noun)
The meaning of the word Vasanth is the spring season in India.
Suresh is a Sanskrit word meaning Supreme God.
Zinc is named from the German zink, meaning tin.
indicia
The order of information on mail typically includes the recipient's name and address, followed by the sender's name and address, and then the postage stamp or indicia.
You would be more likely to seek trade secret protection for the formula, and trademark protection for the name, logo, and other indicia.
This is a postal service for business etc. The mail is franked instead of having to stick on stamps. There are four different levels of serivce offered.
The song is on the EP Never Shout Never, released December 8, 2009. (some indicia say December 7)
eBay can claim copyright protection for the design of its website, as well as print, radio, and television ads, but also has registered trademarks for the name, the particular logo, and other indicia.
Unlike trade marks, "cybermarks" are not merely indicators of product source, but function both as symbolic indicia for human recognition and as strings of computer code in the operation of automated search and indexing mechanisms.
You can typically determine the series of a comic book by looking at the indicia, which is usually found on the inside cover or first few pages. The indicia will indicate the publication year, issue number, and can also specify if it's a new series or continuation of an existing one. Additionally, the cover may also have a "First Issue" or "New Series" label to indicate a relaunch.
Most minority groups can also be identified as ethnic groups, but ethnic groups require a real or fictive kinship as well as cultural indicia. A real kinship is when all of the members of an ethnic group are actually related (almost never true unless incest is common) and fictive kinship is when all of the members of an ethnic group believe that they descend from common ancestors, even though many of the members may not actually descend from these ancestors (even assuming that they are historical persons). Cultural indicia refers to a group possessing unique or distinctive: foods, languages, social behaviors, taboos, religions, social hierarchies, home construction, life-cycle events, etc. An ethnicity need not be unique in all of the cultural indicia, but unique enough to differentiate it from its neighbors.
Typically you would include the (tm) or (r) indicia as appropriate. If you feel it is warranted, you may wish to add a disclaimer that all trademarks are property of their respective companies.
If the book is simply trying to piggyback on the success of the company, yes. But if the book is a critique of the company, no. Generally the publisher will include a disclaimer in the copyright notification of the book, clarifying the ownership of "all related indicia."
Pepsi likely holds many copyrights, for jingles, advertisements, commercials, etc. The Pepsi logo and similar indicia are protected by trademark, and the formula is almost certainly protected as a trade secret. All of these are forms of intellectual property.