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Brand Name - Law Dictionary Search Results

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brand name

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Lucite

A brand name for a transparent plastic based on methyl methacrylate esters the term is often used generically to refer to any similar transparent plastic It is sold in various forms including rigid sheets which may be used as a substitute for glass in windows...


Mac

Shortened form of Macintosh a brand name for a personal computer as the latest Mac has great new features...


French fries

French fries, is in fact used in Americas to describe particular kinds of Potato Chips which could not be treated as the brand name, Tarai Food Ltd. v. Commissioner of Central Excise, 2006 (198) ELT 323....


Branding iron

An iron to brand with...


Brand iron

A branding iron...


Brand spore

One of several spores growing in a series or chain and produced by one of the fungi called brand...


Maverick brand

A brand originated by a dishonest cattleman who without owning any stock gradually accumulates a herd by finding mavericks...


Branding

Branding in the hand or face with a hot iron. A punishment inflicted by law for various offences, after the offender had been allowed benefit of clergy. Abolished by 3 Geo. , 4, c. 38....


Name

Name [fr. nomen, Lat.; nom, Fr.; or namo, Goth.; nama, Sax.; naem, Dut.], the discriminative appellation of an individual.Proper names are either Christian names, as being given at baptism, or surnames, from the father, 4 Rep. 170.A Christian name may be altered at confirmation with consent of the bishop, and the bishop is directed by a Constitution of 1281 to change 'wanton names' at confirmation. See Blunt's Church Law, 2nd ed. at p. 60, where two post-Reformation instances are given of a bishop changing Christian name at confirmation, and it is said to be 'believed that cases still occur where this is done.'Marriage confers a name upon a woman, which is not lost by her divorce, and she can acquire another only by obtaining it by repute obliterating her name by marriage, see Fendall v. Goldsmid, (1877) 2 PD 263. As to retainer of a title, see Cowley v. Cowley, 1901 AC 450.Any one may take on himself whatever surname or as many surnames as he pleases, without an (English) Act of Parli...


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