The third edition of Webster’s International Dictionary, first published in 1961, represented a novel approach to lexicography. It recorded the English language used in everyday life, incorporating colloquial terms that previous grammarians would have considered unfit for any responsible dictionary. Many were scandalized by the new lexicography. Trademark lawyers were not the most prominent of these critics, but the concerns they expressed are significant because they touched on the core structure of the trademark as a form of property in language. In the course of eavesdropping on everyday usage, Merriam-Webster’s lexicographers picked up on the use of trademarks as common nouns: “thermos” as a generic noun for any vacuum flask, “cellophan...
From comic conventions to disbanded dioceses, courts continue to struggle with a unique but puzzling...
A remarkable growth in the value of trademark licensing has been recently recorded. Our paper contri...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
The third edition of Webster’s International Dictionary, first published in 1961, represented a nove...
Recent lawsuits and articles have drawn attention to a growing issue in intellectual property law, t...
“Companies spend billions to promote their brand. But with increased trademark recognition comes the...
A trademark is created when a new meaning is added to an existing word or when a new word is invente...
How do people talk when they talk about trademarks? If trademarks havebecome, as linguist Geoffrey N...
Legal systems that enforce exclusive rights to words claimed as trademarks face two common problems:...
This article is centred on a legally explosive issue of brand names. It investigates the handling of...
This contribution to an inter-disciplinary book on Trademarks and Brands responds to the work of Ala...
The domain name system presents challenges to trademark law that are unique-in both kind and degree-...
In trademark law, genericide (the process in which a proper trademark has transformed through public...
What’s in a word? As it turns out, quite a lot. The vast majority of words in our language, includin...
From comic conventions to disbanded dioceses, courts continue to struggle with a unique but puzzling...
A remarkable growth in the value of trademark licensing has been recently recorded. Our paper contri...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...
The third edition of Webster’s International Dictionary, first published in 1961, represented a nove...
Recent lawsuits and articles have drawn attention to a growing issue in intellectual property law, t...
“Companies spend billions to promote their brand. But with increased trademark recognition comes the...
A trademark is created when a new meaning is added to an existing word or when a new word is invente...
How do people talk when they talk about trademarks? If trademarks havebecome, as linguist Geoffrey N...
Legal systems that enforce exclusive rights to words claimed as trademarks face two common problems:...
This article is centred on a legally explosive issue of brand names. It investigates the handling of...
This contribution to an inter-disciplinary book on Trademarks and Brands responds to the work of Ala...
The domain name system presents challenges to trademark law that are unique-in both kind and degree-...
In trademark law, genericide (the process in which a proper trademark has transformed through public...
What’s in a word? As it turns out, quite a lot. The vast majority of words in our language, includin...
From comic conventions to disbanded dioceses, courts continue to struggle with a unique but puzzling...
A remarkable growth in the value of trademark licensing has been recently recorded. Our paper contri...
This Article mediates a scholarly debate regarding the existence and desirability of a trademark us...