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prepatent

/pat-nt or, for 10, 12-15, peyt-; especially British peyt-nt/US // ˈpæt nt or, for 10, 12-15, ˈpeɪt-; especially British ˈpeɪt nt //UK // (ˈpætənt, ˈpeɪtənt) //

预专利,预备专利,预审,预备

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the exclusive right granted by a government to an inventor to manufacture, use, or sell an invention for a certain number of years.
    • : an invention or process protected by this right.
    • : an official document conferring such a right; letters patent.
    • : the instrument by which the government of the United States conveys the legal fee-simple title to public land.
    • : patent leather.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1

    pa·tent [peyt-nt] /ˈpeɪt nt/

    • : protected by a patent; patented: a patent cooling device.
    • : pertaining to, concerned with, or dealing with patents, especially on inventions: a patent attorney; patent law.
    • : conferred by a patent, as a right or privilege.
    • : holding a patent, as a person.
    • : readily open to notice or observation; evident; obvious: a patent breach of good manners.
    • : made of patent leather: patent shoes.
    • : lying open; not enclosed or shut in: a patent field.
    • : Chiefly Botany. expanded or spreading.
    • : open, as a doorway or a passage.
    • : Phonetics. open, in various degrees, to the passage of the breath stream.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to take out a patent on; obtain the exclusive rights to by a patent.
    • : to originate and establish as one's own.
    • : Metallurgy. to heat and quench so as to prepare for cold-drawing.
    • : to grant by a patent.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Because it’s a biological product, it can’t be patented or sold for a profit.

  • In the early days, it was very important to not publish so that we could get all of our patents, which is ultimately what value here is built on.

  • That September, he filed patent application 143,805, “Art of Compiling Statistics.”

  • The patent does not guarantee that Cansino’s vaccine will ultimately prove successful.

  • The patent application reflects a high level of technical sophistication.

  • Having received a patent on the technology in 1986, Hull founded 3D Systems to commercialize his discoveries.

  • Last week, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office said the Redskins name and logo should not have trademark protection.

  • Snyder is appealing the decision by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, and the team seems confident that it will win again.

  • “Tesla will not initiate patent lawsuits against anyone who, in good faith, wants to use our technology,” he wrote.

  • The description in its entirety begins to read more like the storyline in Her than a real-life patent.

  • Robert Fitzgerald received a patent in England for making salt water fresh.

  • I only draw your attention to the facts; which have been sufficiently patent to the world, whatever Lord Hartledon may think.

  • Papier maché buttons came in with Henry Clay's patent in 1778.

  • Ellis's patent boot studs to save the sole, and the Euknemida, or concave-convex fastening springs, are the latest novelties.

  • Before this patent was granted he had, however, given up the use of weights altogether and relied entirely upon springs.