It's difficult to determine whether a usage would be defensible under Fair Use, but it sometimes helps to consider the four factors:
1. the purpose and character of the use: is your use transformative? does it take something intended for entertainment and cast it in a different like, such as education?
2. the nature of the copyrighted work: it's highly creative, so this factor would not be in your favor
3. the amount and substantiality of the portion used: if you're using the full strip, this factor would also not be in your favor
4. the effect of the use on the potential market: debatable--you might say it would increase interest in commercially-available products, while others might say your use replaces the need for commercially-available products.
At the moment, the courts seem to be focusing on the idea of transformative use--taking something out of the context it was designed for, and using it for commentary, criticism, education, etc.
fdbg
The Great Depression
Mood Disorder
interactive
1. How do you use major depression in a sentence? 2. An example of a major depression is the Great Depression of the 20th Century in the USA.
An example of a homophone for "empty depression" is "empathy depression."
Presenting is like giving and providing is if someone asks you for something and you give them. Example sentence: The University's President presented the award provided by the Student Union.
An economic depression is a sustained, long-term downturn in economic activity in one or more economy. An obvious example is the U.S. Great Depression.
Lots, for example a statistician, or a scientist presenting results.
sadness, hapiness, and depression
A bysen is an example, a pattern, something monstrous or shocking, or a person presenting a ludicrous or disgusting spectacle.
The Great Depression