trademark

See also: trade mark

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From trade +‎ mark.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈtɹeɪdmɑː(ɹ)k/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Rhymes: -eɪdmɑː(ɹ)k
  • Hyphenation: trade‧mark

Noun

trademark (plural trademarks)

  1. A word, symbol, or phrase used to identify a particular company's product and differentiate it from other companies' products.
    Antonyms: generic name; description
    Coordinate terms: brandname, brand name, service mark, tradename, trade name, wordmark
    1. Especially, such a term that is registered with a government agency so as to have legal protection against use by other companies.
  2. Any proprietary business, product or service name.
    • 2005, Kai A. Olsen, The Internet, the Web, and eBusiness, page xv:
      Trademark Notice / The following are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies: [] Google is a trademark of Google Corporation; eBay is a trademark of eBay, Inc.
  3. The aspect for which someone or something is best known; a hallmark or typical characteristic.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Bengali: ট্রেডমার্ক (ṭreḍomark)
  • Hindi: ट्रेडमार्क (ṭreḍmārk)

Translations

See also

Verb

trademark (third-person singular simple present trademarks, present participle trademarking, simple past and past participle trademarked)

  1. (transitive, proscribed) To register something as a trademark.
  2. (transitive, proscribed) To so label a product.

Usage notes

  • Among practitioners of trademark law, it is generally considered incorrect to use “trademark” as a verb; the preferred terminology would be to use a trademark or to register a trademark.

Adjective

trademark (not comparable)

  1. (informal) Distinctive, characteristic, signature.
    • 1996, Jon Byrell, Lairs, Urgers and Coat-Tuggers, Sydney: Ironbark, page 294:
      Sutho took a pull at his Johnny Walker and Coke and laughed that trademark laugh of his and said: `Okay. I'll pay that all right.'
    • 2011 October 15, Owen Phillips, “Stoke 2 - 0 Fulham”, in BBC Sport[1]:
      Riise did crash a fantastic, trademark free-kick against the bar from 25 yards but it was the Potters who increasingly posed the greater threat.
    • 2024 December 12, Eric Cortellessa, “Donald Trump 2024 TIME Person of the Year”, in Time[2]:
      The world’s most powerful man entered with an air of unhurried bonhomie. Dressed in his trademark navy suit and red tie, Trump, 78, appeared a little older than he had some seven months earlier, when he last met with TIME—more subdued, less verbose, the same discursive speech patterns but with the volume turned down.

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