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First person who really help me in this will be the best answered

2006-08-06 03:26:34 · 9 answers · asked by Singapore 2 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

9 answers

(c)

it will come out just like the symbol when you type it in a doc or pdf form.

2006-08-06 03:29:27 · answer #1 · answered by Gabe 6 · 0 0

Trademark promises extra useful secure practices for the reason which you do not could desire to instruct that somebody copied you on purpose and it protects using the call in connection with what you sell. Copyright will in basic terms defend any creative expression on your logo from being copied you do not particularly could desire to do the two precise away, so I recommend you start up making money till now spending any of your capital in this. in the recommend time, a small "TM" next on your call and logo is an fact of worry-unfastened regulation trademark rights. when you sign up, you replace that with an "R" with a circle around it

2016-11-04 00:02:48 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

it depends on the word processor you are using. typically in Microsoft Word you can type (c) for copyright and (T) for trademark and the program will automatically change it for you to the correct graphic/ type face.
i do not use any other word processors so i can't say for certain but i imagine that most of them would use the same format.

2006-08-06 03:32:23 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you can not have at this stage do some logo say in a computer.
i knowit isnow only to have a know how .If you want design one for you your own and later you fix it and get it along with manufacturing some item .you can contact approving authorities .

2006-08-06 03:33:18 · answer #4 · answered by Bhahagyam 4 · 0 0

If you have a Mac, © is alt+g, ® is alt+r, and if you have an American keyboard layout ™ is supposed to be on alt+2 ... it isn't on mine though for some reason... I had to get it from the easy drop-down character palette...!

(On a UK keyboard layout alt+2 is the € ...!)

2006-08-06 18:25:59 · answer #5 · answered by _ 6 · 0 0

Just press and hold the Alt key and follow by the numbers:

© - Alt + 0169
™ - Alt + 0153

2006-08-06 06:08:29 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Go to your symbols section in Word (you could use the help section to find out where it is located).

2006-08-06 03:32:22 · answer #7 · answered by A M 3 · 0 0

If you have Word on your comp go to 'insert' and choose the symbol you want

2006-08-06 03:32:25 · answer #8 · answered by litch 3 · 0 0

copyright = control-alt-c
trademark = control-alt-t

2006-08-06 04:01:44 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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