You cannot. Names, title, and common words/phrases do not qualify for copyright protection.
Since names, titles, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection an advertising slogan could only be registered as a trademark.
no. Copyright protection does not cover names, titles, common words/phrases, etc etc. In some cases a name can be protected by trademark however.
Short phrases such as business names are not copyrightable. If you wish to trademark the name, fees vary significantly.
No you cannot, at least not in the Untied States. Under current US copyright law names, titles, slogans, logos , mottoes, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection. Under certain circumstances however they can be registered as trademarks
Trademark law protects business names, logos, and slogans--"marks"--used in trade. The intent is to protect consumers from fraud in the marketplace.
Short phrases like business names cannot be protected. They can be protected through trademark law, however.
Names, titles, and common words/phrases cannot be copyrighted. Under some circumstances they may be eligible for trademark protection, however.
No. Names, titles, common words/phrases, etc cannot be copyrighted. They can, in some cases, be protected by trademark registration
Names, titles, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection so no "Keyblade" is not copyrighted. However it may be registered as a trademark.
Definetly not copyright. Names, titles, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection. There have however, been several instances of "the Nation" being registered as a trademark, most notably by the weekly publication (registration #0327809)
Short phrases such as names and book titles cannot be protected by copyright. They can be protected by trademark, but this is rare (Harry Potter, for example, is a registered trademark).