LinguistLens, an app, coming soon for the App Store, Google Play Store for Android, and Amazon App Store, for which the basic concept is creating intelligent library reference card-type data resources, which are used both for analyzing sentences, as well as for storing an archive of your saved “cards” for handy future reference. Information generated by the app’s Google Gemini-powered AI engine produces results such as the grammatical etymology of the sentence’s structure, as well as Wikipedia hyperlinks, as tagged keywords that reference article subject headers, all presented in a lean, elegant interface that is intuitive to use and navigate. These data records can be used for a quick study session on the key terms and nominal reference links, and the cards can be saved in the app’s “Vault,” for later usage and review of the data presented in each individual card.
New feature 12/31/2025 - re:Write Studio
The latest release of LinguistLens features an AI-assisted phrase generator that uses the original sentence’s grammatical DNA, in combination with a user’s input, which is supposed to be a context that the user wants to create a phrase within, or about.
Say, for example, you want to describe to feel of the moment, where “you” are playing video games, inside, on rainy day. You want to use the source grammatical structure and key concepts behind the linguistics for the phrase: “The big red fox jumps over the lazy dog.” The re:Write feature takes the context of the rainy day, spent indoors, playing video games, and it creates a new sentence, using the original input sentence Source Text, regarding the big red fox, etc.
A comfy quiet player immerses behind the dripping pane.
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| Step 1: Enter the source text |
So, you decided to swing by without warning already?
is the sentence produced from out of:
So, you want to play hard ball tonight?
The simpler inputs produce a more common and relatable English language output, whereas a more complex query results in a heavily poetic sort of English language usage. Yet, despite this, and, noting that in common, everyday settings, a sentence wouldn’t be so rigidly defined by such constrained parameters, LinguistLens' re:Write feature will adhere to the strictest form of the original sentence’s structure - which, by the way, is delineated in the Structure and Linguistics tab of this window. This window essentially puts the grammatical syntactic structure in to a more descriptive rather than technical form.
The second, lower portion of the tab highlights the key terms that will serve, below, at the bottom of the window, as markers for the hypertext links to the Wikipedia literature that covers these concepts, in individual articles.
The Syntactic Skeleton tab, in this window, presents a more technical analysis of the original sentence’s structure, using academic terms to describe the original sentence. Also found in this pane is the Save to Vault button, which stores the analysis result card as a record on file, useful for later reference and perusal.
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| LinguistLens' Vault storage tab, with basic, summarized data that can be referenced, later, for phrase template sorts of purposes. |
Ready to try the app? Here's a sample web version of the app.
Input Text
Awaiting Input
Paste your text on the left. LinguistLens will extract the grammatical skeleton of every sentence.
Deconstructed Text
0 SEGMENTSLinguistLens Vault
Your searchable library of rhetorical structures.
Vault is Empty
Save sentence skeletons to start building your collection.
No Matches Found
Try searching for a different term.



