Circuit and device claims
Keep component names, layers and connection wording consistent across long claim sets.
Semiconductor and circuit patents repeat component names, process steps and signal terms throughout the claims and specification. PatentLingo identifies the electronics domain first, builds a full-document glossary for components and process terms, and reuses the same wording across the whole draft.
Keep component names, layers and connection wording consistent across long claim sets.
Process steps and material names stay aligned from background to embodiments.
Get a terminology-consistent draft translation before a professional review for filing in another jurisdiction.
Submit the patent draft as a Word file so the workflow can read claims, specification and reference numerals.
The technical field is identified and a glossary of components, layers and signal terms is built once for the whole document.
The same glossary carries through claims, specification and drawing descriptions before delivery.
The same part or signal name is not translated two different ways in the same document.
Fabrication and process steps keep a single, consistent wording from section to section.
Reference numerals and figure labels are kept as-is instead of being reordered without basis.
In Assisted mode, confirm the domain and edit the glossary before the full translation runs.
The workflow identifies the technical field from your own draft, so semiconductor, circuit, communications and similar electronics content are all handled the same way, using a glossary built from your document.
Reference numerals and figure labels are preserved as written; there is no unjustified reordering.
No. It produces a reviewable draft. Have a patent attorney or agent review it before filing or formal submission.
Only docx patent drafts are supported today. PDF and other formats are planned but not yet available.
Pricing is tiered by the source text's character count and shown before you upload; there is no subscription.
Upload a docx draft and preview a sample before deciding on the full translation.
Preview an electronics patent