
I admit that, before today, I had no idea how to distinguish between an "artifact noun" and a "natural kind noun." Nor did I know how such knowledge could ever be relevant to my interests. But now I do!
In ruling on claim construction in Belden Inc. v. CommScope, Inc., C.A. No. 22-783-RGA (D. Del.), Judge Andrews ended up delving into grammar to determine whether the term "non-conductively shielding" was indefinite.
The patent at issue related to high-performance data cables (for example, Cat 6A cables used for 10 GB Ethernet). The patent describes that these cables can have four …








