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1 adopted to distinguish
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > adopted to distinguish
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2 adopted to distinguish
Брит. предназначенный к различению ( о регистрируемых товарных знаках) -
3 trademark adopted to distinguish
1) Юридический термин: товарный знак, предназначенный к различениюУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > trademark adopted to distinguish
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4 trademark adopted to distinguish
товарный знак, предназначенный к различению ( отвечающий требованиям охраноспособности) -
5 предназначенный к различению
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > предназначенный к различению
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6 товарный знак, предназначенный к различению
1) Law: trademark adopted to distinguishУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > товарный знак, предназначенный к различению
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7 trademark
1) товарный знак (прошедшее государственную регистрацию обозначение, обладающее способностью отличать товары или услуги одних юридических или физических лиц от товаров или услуг других юридических или физических лиц)2) маркировать товарным знаком; охранять товарным знаком•- trademark capable of distinguishing
- trademark lacking distinctiveness
- trademark perceived by smell
- trademark perceived by taste
- trademark perceived by touch
- trademark protected telle quelle
- trademark of intended commerce
- abstract trademark
- active trademark
- adopted trademark
- almost identical trademarks
- altered trademark
- amended trademark
- arbitrary trademark
- associated trademark
- bourgeois-realist trademark
- certification trademark
- circle trademark
- collective trademark
- combination trademarks
- combined trademarks
- commonly descriptive trademark
- computerized trademark
- conflicting trademark
- confusing trademark
- corporate trademark
- deceptive trademark
- defensive trademark
- descriptive trademark
- design trademark
- device trademark
- disclaimed trademark
- distinctive trademark
- famous trademark
- fanciful trademark
- federally-registred trademark
- figurative trademark
- figure trademark
- forged trademark
- generic trademark
- identical trademarks
- imitated trademark
- imitative trademark
- incontestable trademark
- infringed trademark
- international trademarks under the Madrid Agreement
- internationally uniform trademarks
- invented word trademark
- jointly owned trademark
- legitimate trademark
- letter trademark
- logo trademark
- monogram trademark
- national trademark
- national trademark under the TRT
- native trademark
- notorious trademark
- obsolete trademark
- official trademark
- old-fashioned trademark
- persuasive trademark
- pharmaceutical trademark
- pictorial trademark
- policing trademark
- presentation trademark
- printed trademark
- prospective trademark
- recognized trademark
- registered trademark
- rejuvenated trademark
- representation trademark
- resembling trademarks
- service trademark
- signature trademark
- similar trademarks
- sketchy trademark
- slogan trademark
- sonor trademark
- sophisticated trademark
- sound trademark
- static trademark
- strong trademark
- stylized trademark
- substantially identical trademarks
- suggestive trademark
- symbolic trademark
- technical trademark
- three-dimensional trademark
- twen trademark
- umbrella trademark
- uniform trademarks
- unregistered trademark
- used trademark
- vertically aligned trademark
- visual trademark
- weak trademark
- well-known trademark
- well-recognized trademark
- word trademark
- world-known trademark
- world-renowned trademark -
8 товарный знак, предназначенный для опознания
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > товарный знак, предназначенный для опознания
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9 trademark
товарний знак, торгова маркаtrademark adopted to distinguish — товарний знак, призначений для розрізнення
trademark capable of distinguishing — товарний знак, здатний до розрізнення
- trademark articletrademark lacking distinctiveness — товарний знак, позбавлений розрізнювальної сили
- trademark conflict
- trademark design
- trademark holder
- trademark infringement
- trademark perceived by taste
- trademark prosecution
- trademarks clause -
10 adopt
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11 предназначенный к различению
( о регистрируемых товарных знаках) adopted to distinguish Брит.Русско-английский словарь по патентам и товарным знакам > предназначенный к различению
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12 trademark
товарный знак, фабричная маркаtrademark adopted to distinguish — товарный знак, предназначенный к различению;
trademark capable of distinguishing — товарный знак, способный к различению;
trademark lacking distinctiveness — товарный знак, лишённый различительной силы;
trademark perceived by smell — обонятельный товарный знак;
- common law trademarktrademark percieved by taste — вкусовой товарный знак;
- distinctive trademark
- famous trademark
- federally-registered trademark
- figurative trademark
- forged trademark
- persuasive trademark
- pictorial trademark
- presentation trademark
- prospective trademark
- registered trademark
- rejuvenated trademark
- sound trademark
- suggestive trademark
- three-dimensional trademark
- umbrella trademark
- Union trademark
- world-renowned trademark -
13 programa de actuación
(n.) = programme of action, action programme, action plan, operating programmeEx. In this laboratory situation, students' analyses and programs of action may undergo some modification as collectively the class debates alternatives.Ex. In the consumer protection field, Community action programmes were agreed in 1975 and 1981 and legislation has been adopted within this framework.Ex. This article outlines the background to an EC library action plan over 5 years supported by some 5 million Ecu.Ex. A close knowledge of the institution is also needed to distinguish between professed objectives, the official and manifest ones which appear in organizational preambles, and the practiced ones which are often latent in the operating program.* * *(n.) = programme of action, action programme, action plan, operating programmeEx: In this laboratory situation, students' analyses and programs of action may undergo some modification as collectively the class debates alternatives.
Ex: In the consumer protection field, Community action programmes were agreed in 1975 and 1981 and legislation has been adopted within this framework.Ex: This article outlines the background to an EC library action plan over 5 years supported by some 5 million Ecu.Ex: A close knowledge of the institution is also needed to distinguish between professed objectives, the official and manifest ones which appear in organizational preambles, and the practiced ones which are often latent in the operating program. -
14 differentiate
1) (to see or be able to tell a difference (between): I cannot even differentiate a blackbird and a starling.) diferenciar, distinguir2) ((with between) to treat differently: She does not differentiate between her two children although one is adopted.) hacer diferencias (entre)tr[dɪfə'renʃɪeɪt]1 diferenciar ( from de)), distinguir ((from, de)1 distinguir ( between, entre)1) : hacer diferente2) distinguish: distinguir, diferenciar: distinguirv.• diferenciar v.• distinguir v.'dɪfə'rentʃieɪt, ˌdɪfə'renʃieɪt
1.
intransitive verb distinguir*
2.
vt (frml)[ˌdɪfǝ'renʃɪeɪt]to differentiate something (FROM something) — diferenciar or distinguir* algo (de algo)
1. VTto differentiate A from B — (=tell the difference) distinguir A de B; (=make the difference) diferenciar A de B
2) (Math) diferenciar2. VI2) (Bio) diferenciarse* * *['dɪfə'rentʃieɪt, ˌdɪfə'renʃieɪt]
1.
intransitive verb distinguir*
2.
vt (frml)to differentiate something (FROM something) — diferenciar or distinguir* algo (de algo)
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15 einen Unterschied machen
((with between) to treat differently: She does not differentiate between her two children although one is adopted.) differentiate* * *(zwischen) ausdr.to distinguish (between) v. -
16 Abolla
A thick woollen mantle, worn originally by the military class of Romans to distinguish them from civilians who wore the toga, but later adopted by the stoic philosophers and other Roman citizens. It was in the form of a piece of cloth folded double and fastened round the throat by a brooch. -
17 New Christians
Term applied to Portuguese of Jewish descent who had been converted to Christianity after the 1496 expulsion of Jews law of King Manuel I. Jews had settled in Portugal since the early years of the monarchy, and by the late 15th century, a significant minority of Jews was dominant in agriculture, medicine, crafts, finance, and government. Part of King Manuel's marriage contract with a Spanish princess decreed the expulsion of Jews in Portugal, following what had occurred in Spain in 1492. Those persons who had converted to Christianity after the 1496 expulsion law in order to avoid having to leave Portugal were termed "New Christians" (Cristãos-Novos) to distinguish them from "Old Christians," the remainder of the Christian population. For centuries thereafter, New Christians suffered persecution and discrimination in Portugal, both at the hands of the Inquisition (after 1536) and from other sectors of society. It was not until the laws passed by the Marquis de Pombal regime in the 1770s that official discrimination in holding public office in Portugal was ended in the case of the New Christians. Some New Christians only formally adopted Catholicism and as "Crypto-Jews" practiced corrupted forms of Judaic belief in remote provincial towns such as Belmonte, in Beira Alta province. Such practices continued into the 20th century -
18 Animal Intelligence
We can... distinguish sharply between the kind of behavior which from the very beginning arises out of a consideration of the structure of a situation, and one that does not. Only in the former case do we speak of insight, and only that behavior of animals definitely appears to us intelligent which takes account from the beginning of the lay of the land, and proceeds to deal with it in a single, continuous, and definite course. Hence follows this criterion of insight: the appearance of a complete solution with reference to the whole lay- out of the field. (KoЁhler, 1927, pp. 169-170)Signs, in [Edward] Tolman's theory, occasion in the rat realization, or cognition, or judgment, or hypotheses, or abstraction, but they do not occasion action. In his concern with what goes on in the rat's mind, Tolman has neglected to predict what the rat will do. So far as the theory is concerned the rat is left buried in thought: if he gets to the food-box at the end that is his concern, not the concern of the theory. (Guthrie, 1972, p. 172)3) A New Insight Consists of a Recombination of Pre-existent Mediating PropertiesThe insightful act is an excellent example of something that is not learned, but still depends on learning. It is not learned, since it can be adequately performed on its first occurrence; it is not perfected through practice in the first place, but appears all at once in recognizable form (further practice, however, may still improve it). On the other hand, the situation must not be completely strange; the animal must have had prior experience with the component parts of the situation, or with other situations that have some similarity to it.... All our evidence thus points to the conclusion that a new insight consists of a recombination of pre existent mediating processes, not the sudden appearance of a wholly new process. (Hebb, 1958, pp. 204-205)In Morgan's own words, the principle is, "In no case may we interpret an action as the outcome of the exercise of a higher psychical faculty, if it can be interpreted as the outcome of the exercise of one which stands lower in the psychological scale." Behaviorists universally adopted this idea as their own, interpreting it as meaning that crediting consciousness to animals can't be justified if the animal's behavior can be explained in any other way, because consciousness is certainly a "higher psychical faculty." Actually, their interpretation is wrong, since Morgan was perfectly happy with the idea of animal consciousness: he even gives examples of it directly taken from dog behavior. Thus in The Limits of Animal Intelligence, he describes a dog returning from a walk "tired" and "hungry" and going down into the kitchen and "looking up wistfully" at the cook. Says Morgan about this, "I, for one, would not feel disposed to question that he has in his mind's eye a more or less definite idea of a bone."Morgan's Canon really applies to situations where the level of intelligence credited to an animal's behavior goes well beyond what is really needed for simple and sensible explanation. Thus application of Morgan's Canon would prevent us from presuming that, when a dog finds its way home after being lost for a day, it must have the ability to read a map, or that, if a dog always begins to act hungry and pace around the kitchen at 6 P.M. and is always fed at 6:30 P.M., this must indicate that it has learned how to tell time. These conclusions involve levels of intelligence that are simply not needed to explain the behaviors. (Coren, 1994, pp. 72-73)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Animal Intelligence
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