Using Pinogrammer Domain Profiles:
Legal, Medical, Academic and More

A grammar correction that's right for a Slack message is wrong for a legal brief. Domain profiles teach Pinogrammer what kind of writing you're doing — what to fix, what to preserve, and what to leave entirely alone.

What domain profiles do

Every domain of writing has its own grammar rules — or rather its own tolerance for what counts as an "error". Passive voice is bad in marketing copy and essential in academic writing. "Pursuant to" is not an error in a legal brief; it's deliberately precise language. "LVEF 45%" is not a typo; it's a standard clinical abbreviation.

Without domain profiles, a general grammar tool treats all of these as potential errors and may "fix" them into something that's actually wrong for the context. Pinogrammer's domain profiles solve this by loading a context-specific instruction set that overrides the general correction logic for known edge cases in that domain.

Each profile has two lists: what it corrects aggressively (genuine errors for that register) and what it protects (intentional patterns that should never be changed).

General profile

📝
General
Balanced corrections for everyday writing. Default profile.
Corrects
  • Subject-verb agreement errors
  • Wrong tense usage
  • Missing articles (a/an/the)
  • Comma splices
  • Dangling modifiers
  • Spelling errors
Protects
  • Common contractions (it's, don't)
  • First-person register (I, we)
  • Oxford comma variation
  • Brand name capitalisation

Use General for emails, blog posts, social media, chat, and anything that doesn't require a specific specialist register.

⚖️
Legal
Precision corrections for contracts, filings, and legal correspondence.
Corrects
  • Inconsistent defined-term usage
  • Incorrect shall/will/may modal usage
  • Ambiguous pronoun reference
  • Inconsistent party name capitalisation
  • Spelling and spacing in citations
Protects
  • Latin terms (inter alia, prima facie)
  • "hereinafter", "pursuant to", "notwithstanding"
  • Passive constructions in obligations
  • Boilerplate clause language
  • Citation abbreviations (Id., Ibid., et al.)

The most important thing Legal profile does is not simplify. Without it, a general grammar corrector may replace "pursuant to Section 4(b)" with "under Section 4(b)" — technically English, but legally imprecise, and potentially meaningfully different in a signed agreement.

Without Legal profile
The aforementioned party shall provide notice pursuant to the agreed timeline.
Flags "aforementioned" and "pursuant to" as formal/archaic
With Legal profile
The aforementioned party shall provide notice pursuant to the agreed timeline.
Preserves legal terms; only corrects actual errors

Academic profile

🎓
Academic
Scholarly register with passive voice, hedging language, and formal structure.
Corrects
  • Informal register in formal sections
  • Contractions in academic prose
  • Vague quantifiers ("a lot of data")
  • Incorrect citation punctuation
  • Run-on sentences in abstracts
Protects
  • Passive voice constructions
  • Hedging language (may, might, appears)
  • Discipline-specific jargon
  • Third-person scholarly register
  • Latin abbreviations (e.g., i.e., etc.)

Academic writing deliberately uses passive voice ("the samples were analysed…") to maintain objectivity and focus on the method rather than the researcher. A general grammar tool will flag every passive construction as "wordy" and suggest converting to active voice. Academic profile disables this.

Without Academic profile
The data was collected over six weeks. It was found that mean scores increased significantly.
Passive voice flagged as "consider active voice"
With Academic profile
The data was collected over six weeks. It was found that mean scores increased significantly (p < 0.05).
Passive preserved; statistical notation protected

Medical profile

🏥
Medical
Clinical precision — preserves ICD codes, drug names, and medical abbreviations.
Corrects
  • Ambiguous pronoun reference in clinical notes
  • Inconsistent date/time formatting
  • Misspelled drug names (if clearly wrong)
  • Incomplete sentences in referral letters
  • Incorrect negation in diagnoses
Protects
  • ICD-10 and ICD-11 codes
  • Drug names and dosage abbreviations
  • Clinical abbreviations (LVEF, RBC, BP, O2)
  • Medical notation (q.d., b.i.d., p.r.n.)
  • Procedure and diagnosis codes
⚠️
Medical profile is not a medical accuracy checker. It protects clinical terminology from being "simplified" by grammar correction — it does not validate clinical correctness, drug dosages, or diagnostic accuracy. Clinical judgement remains the clinician's responsibility. Pinogrammer does not have access to clinical knowledge graphs or drug databases.

Business profile

💼
Business
Professional tone — clear, direct, and appropriately formal without being stiff.
Corrects
  • Excessive hedging in client communication
  • Unnecessarily passive constructions
  • Filler phrases ("as per my previous email…")
  • Inconsistent number formatting
  • Ambiguous action ownership ("it should be done")
Protects
  • Business acronyms (ROI, EBITDA, KPI)
  • Industry-standard terminology
  • Numerical formatting (£1.2M, Q3 FY26)
  • Action item phrasing in meeting notes

Creative profile

✍️
Creative
Light touch — fixes genuine errors but preserves voice, rhythm, and intentional style.
Corrects
  • Actual spelling errors
  • Broken syntax that reads as unintentional
  • Inconsistent character name spelling
  • Homophones (their/there/they're)
Protects
  • Intentional sentence fragments
  • Single-word paragraphs for effect
  • Stylistic run-ons in stream-of-consciousness
  • Unconventional capitalisation in dialogue
  • Dialect and register variation in characters

Creative writing profiles are the hardest to get right because the line between "intentional style" and "error" is subjective. Pinogrammer uses confidence scoring: very low confidence corrections in Creative mode are suppressed. Only high-confidence genuine errors (homophones, missing words, broken sentences) surface as suggestions.

When and how to switch profiles

Profile switching takes about 2 seconds. Open the Pinogrammer toolbar popup and select the profile from the dropdown. Alternatively, click the profile chip in the suggestion card header to cycle through profiles. The active profile persists until you change it — it's not per-tab.

If you're writing…Use profileBecause…
A client proposal or board memoBusinessDirect and professional tone, protects industry terms
A research paper or dissertationAcademicPassive voice preserved, citation format protected
A contract, NDA, or legal briefLegalLatin terms and formal register never simplified
A clinical note or referral letterMedicalICD codes, drug names, abbreviations all protected
A short story, script, or copyCreativeOnly genuine errors surfaced; style preserved
Email, Slack, social posts, everyday writingGeneralBalanced corrections with no domain bias
💡
Coming soon — per-site profile memory: A future update will remember which profile you use on which sites. Gmail defaults to Business, Notion to Academic, Twitter to General. You'll be able to set these once and forget.

Pro: custom terminology glossary

PinoSuite Pro subscribers can add a custom glossary — a list of terms that should never be corrected, regardless of profile. This is useful for:

Glossary terms are stored locally in the extension and never sent to any server. They override all profile rules — if a term is in your glossary, it will never appear as an error suggestion.

Complete guide → Indian languages → Pinogrammer overview →