Apple cultivars I saw for sale at Kaufland in Brno, Czechia:

Granny Smith
Golden Delicious
Jonagold
Red Delicious
Red Prince
Braeburn
Cripps Pink ("Pink Lady")
Gala
"Cosmic Crisp"
Eva (I think...I might be misremembering this one).

Didn't see any Czech cultivars per se. #FruitToot #Agrobiodiversity #Czechia

@ml it is indeed Cosmic Crisp, it's a relatively new apple, and it's absolutely delicious. It's my go-to apple these days. Descended from the Honeycrisp I believe.
@jaz Oh, I'm familiar wtih "Cosmic Crisp". I used quotes because that's a marketing name (which can be trademarked in perpetuity) rather than the actual cultivar name. #FruitToot
@ml ah, I see, good to know!

@jaz To clarify, I don't know if cultivar names can be trademarked, but the plant patents run out in a finite time in most countries. Then people who do not pay the patent fee can grow and market it.

So one tack plant breeding companies have taken is to develop a marketing name they can trademark. If you ask consumers what "Pink Lady" is, they generally know. Whereas few of them know what 'Cripps Pink' is...the actual cultivar name. And if anyone besides the trademark holder uses the name,

@jaz they can still be sued even after the plant patent has expired. So this is one reason I make the distinction.

I use cultivar names in single quotes, and tradmarked marketing names in double quotes. "Cosmic Crisp" has the rather uninspiring cultivar name of 'WA38'. https://treefruit.wsu.edu/cosmic-crisp-characteristics-and-horticulture/ #FruitToot

WA 38 Characteristics and Horticulture | WSU Tree Fruit | Washington State University