English trademarks that differ only in the last two words will be judged as similar trademarks and may involve infringement.
The review standards for English trademarks are as follows:
Different initial letters: When reviewing two meaningless English trademarks, if the first letters are different, the similarity is low and it is generally judged to be not similar.
The first letter is the same, and the order of other letters is changed: the fourth and fifth letters of the two English trademarks are different, but because there are more letters, the overall look is not much different, so the two English trademarks The likelihood that a trademark is determined to be a similar trademark is relatively high.
Three-letter meaningless English: If a different letter is added, the examiner will consider the similarity to be lower. If a repeated letter is added, the examiner will consider the similarity to be higher.