According to the section "Cost 3" of "The Pros and Cons of Patents", only the creator of an idea can decide if that invention deserves the amount of time and effort invested protecting it.
The problems appear when patents are too narrow because this can lead to immediate confrontations between competitors or other inventors that <u>create a very similar product</u> or a slight variation of a product that was patented first, but doesn't actually violate any rights and it's appealing to the same market or targeted public.
Thus they say they came up with that idea on their own and a legal debate rises up, because there is actually no infringement but the ideas are very similar, only different in slight variations.
So those trivial circumstances can lead to a legal affair in court, because the rules about infringement can be tangling.
Answer:
A) Her screams and apparent hallucinations terrify the other prisoners.
B) She refuses to stop complaining about the conditions on the train.
E) They do not want the morale of the prisoners to get any worse than it already is.
Explanation:
Mrs. Schachter is in a cattle car with other Jews who have been taken by the Nazis. These people have no idea where they are being driven to. The soldiers' treatment of them so far suggests that it won't end well for them when they reach their destination. Mrs. Schachter's responses to being crowded into a cattle car with a large number of other individuals and driven off to an unknown location reflect those of the rest. They are terrified of what is about to happen. Her screams are also so obnoxious and constant that they make the other prisoners extremely uncomfortable and anxious. Once they've had enough of her antics they decide to have her bound, gagged, and beaten. They later discover that Mrs. Schachter was correct. They do disembark in Auschwitz, where victims are gassed in rooms and corpses are cremated in ovens.
I had put the answer D, but I am still in the middle of the test.
Answer:
An appositive (or an appositive phrase) gives more information about a noun. The appositive is usually placed next to the noun it modifies. Writers use appositive and appositive phrases in order to provide more information about something.
Explanation: