
Administered by the USPTO and governed by 35 U.S.C. §112(b) and official standards in
MPEP 2173, U.S. patent examination mandates that all claims must particularly point out
and distinctly claim the invention. Indefiniteness rejection ranks among the most common
non-novelty office actions, caused by ambiguous wording, relative terms, unclear structural
limitations or lack of antecedent basis. Unlike prior art rejections, this procedural defect arises
from flawed drafting rather than existing technology. This case study analyzes a typical
indefiniteness rejection, clarifies judgment criteria, and delivers standardized claim drafting
guidelines for global R&D teams.
In early 2025, a North American smart sensor startup filed a U.S. utility patent application
for a new environmental monitoring device. To broaden claim scope, the drafting team adopted
vague descriptive phrases such as “flexible structure” and “high-precision sensing module”
without defining these terms in the specification. The claims also applied functional language
without corresponding structural limitations, failing to match the written disclosure.
During substantive examination, the USPTO examiner issued a strict §112(b) indefiniteness
rejection. The office action ruled that a person skilled in the art could not accurately determine
the claim boundaries, since relative and undefined terms created multiple reasonable
interpretations. The startup attempted to argue that broad claim language complied with
patent rules but submitted no claim amendments or definitional supplements. After two failed
response rounds, the application was finally abandoned due to unresolved indefiniteness
defects, causing complete loss of filing priority and commercial protection opportunities.
First, the definiteness standard is based on person having ordinary skill in the art
(PHOSITA). USPTO examiners evaluate claim clarity from the perspective of average industry
technicians. If ambiguous wording leads to uncertain protection scope, the claim is statutorily
indefinite, regardless of the applicant’s subjective intent.
Second, undefined relative qualitative terms trigger high rejection risks. Vague expressions
including “high-efficiency”, “lightweight”, and “improved performance” are deemed
unenforceable without explicit numerical thresholds, structural definitions or contextual
limitations in the specification. Pure functional limitations without corresponding structural
features also violate §112(b) requirements.
Third, lack of antecedent basis constitutes a typical indefiniteness defect. Pronouns or
referenced technical features in claims must have clear preliminary definitions in preceding
claim paragraphs or specifications. Unmatched reference relationships directly result in official
rejection.
Fourth, indefiniteness defects cannot be waived by argument. Per USPTO rules, amendment
is the only effective remedy. Applicants must revise ambiguous language, supplement explicit
definitions, or delete uncertain limitations to clarify claim boundaries.
Avoid vague relative adjectives in independent and dependent claims. Replace ambiguous
descriptions with quantitative parameters, specific structures and clear material limitations
to ensure objective scope definition. Uniformly define specialized terms and functional features
in the specification to provide solid support for all claim limitations.
Strictly follow antecedent basis logic during drafting, ensuring every technical limitation has
raceable preliminary disclosure. Conduct pre-submission §112(b) compliance review to eliminate
drafting defects in advance. When receiving indefiniteness office actions, prioritize targeted
amendments rather than procedural arguments to avoid prolonged prosecution and application
abandonment.
35 U.S.C. §112(b) definiteness compliance is a fundamental threshold for U.S. patent allowance.
This typical abandonment case verifies that loose claim drafting and undefined ambiguous
language will directly block patent grant. For global innovative enterprises, standardized claim
drafting, precise term definition and full specification support are essential to pass USPTO
substantive examination and secure stable exclusive patent rights in the U.S. market.
Hyperlink List:
● IPcrossark:
https://www.ipcrossark.com/en/patent_detail/4.html
● USPTO Official MPEP 2173 Definiteness Guidelines: