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The phrase "wave logo" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a logo that features a wave design or motif, often associated with themes of water, movement, or fluidity. Example: "The new branding for the surf shop includes a vibrant wave logo that captures the essence of the ocean."
Exact(1)
Your credit or debit card will have a "wave" logo.
Similar(57)
When Tulane players took the field with their usual T-wave logo replaced by Walker's number, they were greeted by fans in the Superdome wearing white shirts with Walker's number in green.
One retired General Dynamics engineer wore a 14-karat gold tie pin bearing Wave's logo.
For the better part of the morning Monday, the drivers rallied on the corner Jackson Avenue, shaking their fists at the black U logo, waving handmade signs, and shouting down bewildered twentysomethings that the company sent out to reason with mob.
For the better part of the morning Monday, the drivers rallied on the corner of Jackson Avenue, shaking their fists at the black U logo, waving handmade signs, and shouting down bewildered twentysomethings that the company sent out to reason with mob.
Beneath the Camel logo, Urban Wave dance parties – stretching from Mexico to the Ukraine – hand out free cigarettes, and are themselves free: you must be invited and register, thereby helping the tobacco company build up a database.
Most of those who ventured downtown either wore a shirt with the hand logo or waved plastic hands with the Madrid logo.
He also contacted Reebok to get the team's sweaters — Washington Capitals look-alikes bearing the Camp Patriot logo of a waving flag behind a Revolutionary War soldier.
"We really started a major trend with the logos," he says, offering square peppermints from an Altoids-type tin imprinted with the Hilfiger logo and impishly waving a jar of Tommy's American Pie moisturizer with the other hand.
A video released online by the militants in August showed footage of them, turbans wrapped around their faces, waving a flag bearing the logo of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, Yemen's branch of the terrorist network that has tried twice, unsuccessfully, to stage attacks in the United States.
The Waves took their name not from Jamaica Bay, just a neighborhood away, but because they were partial to Adidas shoes and found the shoe company's striped logo to resemble a wave, the authorities said.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com