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How to Protect Brand Name in Multiple Languages

17 March 2026 · Legal Help Desk · 3 min read

Question: Our brand has English + Arabic and other language versions. Should we file both, and how do we handle translation/transliteration risks and look-alike marks? 

 

Answer  

Yes—if you use (or plan to use) both versions publicly, you should usually protect both. The real risk is that someone registers the Arabic (or an Arabic-sounding variant) and then you end up negotiating for your own brand. 

 

Start with the core rule: protect what the customer actually sees 

You typically have three “brand forms” that may need protection: 

  1. English word mark (e.g., “NOVA”) 
  2. Arabic script version (e.g., نوفا) — could be transliteration or a translated meaning 
  3. Logo/device (especially if Arabic calligraphy is part of it) 

If your packaging/website/signage shows both English and Arabic, filing only one is usually leaving a gap. 

 

Transliteration vs translation: the two traps people fall into 

Trap A: “Different script, so it’s different.” 

Not always. In disputes/examination, similarity can be assessed by: 

  • sound (pronunciation) 
  • meaning (concept) 
  • overall impression 

So an Arabic transliteration that sounds the same can still be treated as close. 

Trap B: “I’ll just translate the meaning.” 

A translation is not automatically “your” mark. Example logic: 

  • English brand is a common word → Arabic translation might be even more common → harder to protect / easier to conflict. 

 

What to file (practical, high-ROI strategy) 

A) File the English word mark

This is usually the primary asset. 

B) File the Arabic version youactually use

  • If you use an Arabic transliteration (sound-alike), file that exact spelling. 
  • If you use an Arabic translation (meaning-based), file that exact word too. 

C) Consider filing key transliteration variants (selectively)

Arabic transliterations can have multiple acceptable spellings. If your brand is high-value or heavily exposed, it may be worth protecting the 2–3 most likely variants—but don’t spray-and-pray. 

D) File the logo/device separately

Especially important if: 

  • Arabic calligraphy is stylized (people recognize the design), or 
  • you expect the word form to evolve but the device stays. 

 

Search and clearance must be bilingual 

A proper clearance step should check: 

  • the English mark 
  • the Arabic script mark 
  • common transliteration variants 
  • conceptual translations (where relevant) 

This is where many “surprise objections” come from—people search only in English. 

 

Use and consistency: don’t accidentally weaken your own position 

  • Pick one official Arabic rendering for public use (packaging, website, invoices). 
  • Avoid using 4 different Arabic spellings across platforms—this makes enforcement harder. 
  • Keep a dated record of use for both scripts (invoices/packaging/screenshots). 

 

How to reduce look-alike risk in the real world 

  • Reserve domains/handles in likely transliterations (even if you don’t use them immediately). 
  • Set up a simple watch/monitoring process for new filings that are sound-alikes/meaning-alikes. 
  • If you operate on marketplaces/social, prepare a standard evidence pack (registrations + proof of use) for takedowns. 

 

Consult an expert with these 5 items (to decide the cleanest filing set) 

  1. Your English mark + any Arabic version you’re already using (exact spellings) 
  2. Where the Arabic appears (packaging, signage, invoices, website, ads) 
  3. Your goods/services + countries/territories where you’ll operate 
  4. Any known similar marks (English or Arabic) from your initial search 
  5. Whether your Arabic version is intended as transliteration (sound) or translation (meaning) 
Legal Help Desk

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