Patented
in sentence
74 examples of Patented in a sentence
Jason Robards does one of his
patented
cameos playing a real life character (his Howard Hughes makes a neat hat trick with his Oscar winning performances as Dashiell Hammett and Ben Bradley.)
Ruth Gordon doing her patented, deceptively off-center, crazy-like-a-fox character, and making the most of it.
The animation technique is patented, the characters are original and lively and all scenes are extremely carefully and detailed modeled.
It's sort of a first draft of 'My Favorite Wife' (remade as 'Move Over Darling') and has all the
patented
screwball-romantic comedy-French farce elements of the 'Palm Beach Story' but in a less sophisticated form.
John Landis as a director gets worse with every outing after peaking with "Trading Places" where Akyroyd's
patented
anal-retentiveness played well off Eddie Murphy's con-man charm.
Paxton Whitehead does his
patented
snob number, and Elaine Stritch gets a star turn that won her an Emmy.
The best joke of all – that Bezos bought the Post by mistake through an errant one-click purchase (a capability
patented
by Amazon) – has a ring of truth to it.
To prevent forgery, businesses must purchase special,
patented
machines for printing these receipts.
Such cells resemble human embryos, which, under European Union patent law, cannot be
patented.
And it did not consider whether the activated egg cell – a “parthenote” – counts as a germ cell, which also cannot be
patented
in the EU (though it did pose the question to the applicants at the hearing).
But even if the ISCC’s patent applications are not excluded on these grounds, there is another potential roadblock for applicants: Under European law, an invention can be
patented
only if its commercial exploitation is deemed not to controvert “ordre public” or morality.
Allowing local producers to copy
patented
medicines, officials assert, will bring down prices and expand access.
State regulation does continue to exist where seeds are concerned, but nowadays it is aimed at farmers, who are being pushed into dependency on patented, corporate seed.
The next morning, Leo Szilard hypothesized the idea of a neutron-induced nuclear chain reaction; soon thereafter, he
patented
the nuclear reactor.
Companies are not always able to recoup their investments by setting a high price on
patented
antibiotics.
The Court must answer the following question: Can human genes – your genes – be
patented?
If these technologies had been patented, Myriad might not have made its discoveries.
Their argument is that what is
patented
is not the gene as it occurs in our bodies, but rather a sort of “cloned” version produced in the laboratory.
Murdoch’s newspapers and television networks might as well have
patented
the recipe for the deceitful, dog-whistle politics that powered Trump’s rise and the Brexit vote.
Gene sequences are patented; cord blood is a hot property.
His physician
patented
certain chemicals in Moore's blood without his knowledge or consent, set up contracts, and sold the rights to a Swiss pharmaceutical company to produce drugs from the "Mo" cell line.
How is it possible that, because no company with currently
patented
drugs is campaigning to help medical and nursing staff recognize the catatonic features displayed by one in ten patients going through a psychiatric unit – features that could be treated rapidly with benzodiazepines or ECT – these features are missed completely?
Some propose abandoning the current system of
patented
drugs altogether and funding pharmaceutical R&D through taxation or prize-based systems.
All countries that have successfully globalized have used such policies, many of which (e.g., subsidies, domestic-content rules, reverse engineering of
patented
products) are currently not allowed under WTO rules.
sued Barnes & Noble.com for offering to its customers Amazon's
patented "
one-click shopping" method.
The US Supreme Court’s 2013 decision that naturally occurring genes cannot be
patented
has provided a test of whether patents stimulate research and innovation, as advocates claim, or impede it, by restricting access to knowledge.
The answer is simple: Most economic ideas are public goods that cannot be
patented
or otherwise owned by their inventors.
One in five human genes is now patented, even though the human genome might be thought to be our common heritage.
Most people are shocked when they learn that one-fifth of the human genome has been patented, mostly by private firms.
The chief executive of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) unveiled a four-point plan that included a commitment to cap prices for
patented
medicines in LDCs at 25% of the price in the developed world.
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