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| Alphabetical [« »] pasta 1 pasteboard 1 patching 1 patent 45 patented 8 patentees 1 patents 1 | Frequency [« »] 47 my 47 these 46 our 45 patent 44 do 44 has 44 still | Thomas H. Marshall James Watt IntraText - Concordances patent |
Art.
1 3| over an infringer of his patent. The old scientist, weakened 2 4| was an infringement of his patent, but was pacified by being 3 5| experiments and of securing a patent. In return for this he was 4 5| yet ready to apply for a patent. At the beginning of I 768 5 5| The specifications for the patent were being prepared, and 6 5| even hourly. So, although a patent was applied for, and secured 7 5| pay the expenses of the patent Watt had been forced to 8 5| something out of the wreck. The patent was worthless. The engine 9 6| one-third of the rights in the patent for a sum of not less than 10 6| the full property in the patent in return for a complete 11 6| profits that were his due. The patent was for fourteen years, 12 6| plan of surrendering the patent and getting a new one. This 13 6| him to get the existing patent prolonged by Act of Parliament.~ 14 6| the lines indicated in his patent, and whereas heavy expenses 15 6| granted by the said Letters Patent may probably elapse before 16 7| two-thirds of the property in the patent, and undertook to pay all 17 7| exclusive privileges of the patent lasted. This scheme had 18 7| in recompense for our patent licence, our drawings, etc." 19 8| since Watt took out his patent.~The reciprocating engine 20 8| Watt took out his first patent, Arkwright patented his 21 8| now Arkwright's iniquitous patent for a process he had not 22 8| his case, and in 1785 his patent was finally quashed. This 23 8| who had gone to Ireland on patent business: " If you come 24 8| perform.~In his original patent of 1769 Watt had included 25 8| up to London, took out a patent for the use of the crank 26 8| that any one could claim to patent the crank, for, as he said 27 8| If he had challenged the patent, he could almost certainly 28 8| for the annihilation of patent rights for fear that he 29 8| the lapsing of his rival's patent set him free to adopt the 30 8| The partnership and the patent rights were both due to 31 8| disturbed theme In any case the patent had only a few years to 32 8| quickly decided that the patent had been infringed; they 33 8| Common Pleas whether the patent was in itself good and valid. 34 8| deliver on the subject of the patent laws. Each in turn gave 35 8| Was the subject of the patent a process or only a principle? 36 9| proud of it. He took out a patent in 1780 and then hawked 37 9| the specification of my patent in the year 1781" I do not 38 9| Stanhope, who had taken out a patent for steamships. " His Lordship 39 9| one Moore, has taken out a patent for moving wheel-carriages 40 9| usual paddle-wheels.~In his patent of 1784 Watt included the 41 9| on it." Now to take out a patent that may block the path 42 9| Murdock wished to apply for a patent on his own, Watt wrote angrily 43 9| as an infringement of his patent, " but as we thought them 44 9| swallowed up in expenses, patent rights invaded by pirates 45 9| indeed. Even before the patent expired in 1800, engines