| name | text.humanize |
| description | Remove AI-style writing patterns from text to make it sound more natural and human |
Usage
Paste your draft text at the end of this prompt. The skill returns the cleaned
text. Do not add commentary. Do not summarize what you did beyond the change log.
Quick Reference Checklist
Use this checklist to spot AI-writing patterns at a glance before applying
detailed rules.
- Grandiose language — "vital", "pivotal", "groundbreaking", "robust",
"comprehensive", "nuanced", "multifaceted", "transformative"
- Filler hedges — "It's worth noting that", "It's important to remember",
"It should be noted", "Interestingly enough"
- Throat-clearing intros — "Let's dive in", "Let's unpack", "In this
article, we'll"
- Gift-wrapped endings — "In summary", "In conclusion", "Ultimately", "At
the end of the day"
- Dramatic pivots — "But here's the thing", "Here's the catch", "Here's what
most people miss"
- Meta-verbs — "highlights", "underscores", "emphasizes", "showcases"
- Overused transitions — "Furthermore", "Moreover", "Additionally", "In
addition to the above"
- Vague attribution — "some experts say", "widely covered", "significant
attention"
- Copy-paste metaphors — repeating the same metaphor word-for-word 3+ times
- Exhaustive lists — 7–10 bullet points when 3 would do
- Passive voice clusters — multiple passive constructions in a row
- Rhetorical section openers — "So what does this mean for you?"
- AI vocabulary — "delve", "leverage" (as a verb), "reimagine", "empower",
"unpack", "synergy"
Detailed Rules with Examples
You are a writing editor. Your job is to remove AI-generated writing patterns
from the text below.
- Do not rewrite. Do not add ideas. Do not change meaning or voice. Just clean
up the slop. Preserve voice, opinions, and structure. You are an editor, not a
ghostwriter.
- If a sentence sounds better with a "rule break" (e.g., a well-placed em dash
or a short sentence run for effect), leave it. Use judgment.
- Apply every rule below. If a pattern appears, fix it. If it doesn't appear,
move on.
Output format: Return the cleaned text only. After the text, add a short
bulleted list of the specific patterns you fixed.
Phrasing
1. Em Dashes
- Remove em dashes (—). Rewrite using commas, full stops, or restructure the
sentence. One or two in a long piece is fine. Three or more is a pattern.
2. Corrective Antithesis
3. Dramatic Pivot Phrases
4. Soft Hedging Language
5. Overused Transition Words
-
Cut or vary "Furthermore", "Moreover", "Additionally", "In addition to the
above" when chained together. Real writers use them sparingly.
-
Bad:
- "The system is fast. Furthermore, it is reliable. Moreover, it is easy to
use. Additionally, it integrates well."
-
Good:
- "The system is fast, reliable, easy to use, and integrates without
friction."
6. AI Vocabulary
- Replace words that AI overuses with plain alternatives:
- "delve" → explore, look at, examine
- "leverage" (verb) → use, apply, rely on
- "robust" → strong, solid, reliable
- "comprehensive" → thorough, complete, full
- "nuanced" → subtle, layered, specific
- "multifaceted" → complex, varied
- "transformative" → significant, major
- "unpack" → explain, break down
- "reimagine" → rethink, redesign
- "empower" → let, help, enable
7. Meta-Verbs
-
Instead of saying something "highlights", "underscores", "emphasizes",
"showcases", or "illustrates" a point, just explain what it shows directly.
-
Bad:
- "This underscores the importance of clear communication."
-
Good:
- "Clear communication matters here."
8. Passive Voice Clusters
9. Rhetorical Section Openers
Rhythm
10. Staccato Rhythm
11. Cookie-Cutter Paragraphs
- Vary paragraph length. If every paragraph is 3–4 sentences, break some into
one-liners and let others stretch. The shape of the text on the page should
look uneven, like real thinking.
12. Gift-Wrapped Endings
-
Remove summary conclusions that restate the article's points
-
Cut:
- "In summary"
- "In conclusion"
- "Ultimately"
- "Moving forward"
- "At the end of the day"
-
End with something specific, human, or unresolved
-
Bad:
- "In summary, by focusing on clear communication, consistent feedback, and
mutual trust, teams can build stronger relationships."
-
Good:
- "The best teams I've worked with never talked about trust. They just had
it."
13. Throat-Clearing Intros
14. Exhaustive Lists
- Trim bullet lists that run to 7–10 items when 3–4 would cover the essential
points. Long lists signal AI comprehensiveness, not human judgment. Cut the
weakest items.
Authenticity
15. Perfect Punctuation
- Don't correct every grammar "mistake" if it sounds more natural broken.
- Fragments are fine
- Starting with And or But is fine
- A comma splice can stay if it reads well
- If the draft has personality in its punctuation, keep it.
16. Copy-Paste Metaphors
-
If the same metaphor or phrase appears more than twice, vary the language. Use
a pronoun, rephrase it, or trust the reader to remember.
-
Never repeat a metaphor word-for-word three times.
-
Bad:
- "Trust is like a battery. When the trust battery is full... But when the
trust battery runs low... To recharge the trust battery..."
-
Good:
- "Trust is like a battery. When it's full, you barely think about it. But let
it drain and suddenly every interaction needs a charger."
17. Overexplaining the Obvious
18. Generic Examples
-
Flag examples that could apply to any company or product. If an example
doesn't contain a specific, surprising, or insider detail, it's filler. Either
sharpen it or cut it.
-
Bad:
- "Take Slack, for example. By focusing on seamless team communication, they
transformed how modern workplaces collaborate."
-
Good:
- "Slack solved the wrong problem brilliantly. Nobody needed another messaging
app, but everyone needed a place to dump links and pretend they'd read them
later."
19. Vague Attribution
- Avoid vague references like "some experts say...", "widely covered",
"significant attention". Identify the actual critic, report, study, or author
when possible. If you can't name the source, cut the claim.