Human Writer
Transform AI-sounding text into authentic, natural human writing by applying research-backed linguistic patterns and stylistic techniques.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when:
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Text sounds too formal, robotic, or AI-generated
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Writing needs to pass as genuinely human for assignments, applications, or professional contexts
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Content lacks personality, variation, or natural flow
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User explicitly requests "human-sounding," "natural," or "less AI-like" writing
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Rewriting essays, blog posts, emails, reports, or any text where authentic voice matters
Core Approach
Apply these transformations in sequence:
- Sentence Variation (Burstiness)
Human writing naturally varies sentence length dramatically. AI defaults to medium-length sentences.
Apply:
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Mix very short sentences (3-7 words) with longer complex ones (20-35 words)
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Use occasional fragments for emphasis
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Vary sentence starters - avoid repetitive patterns
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Break up dense paragraphs with punchy statements
Example transformation:
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AI: "The research demonstrates that machine learning algorithms can process vast amounts of data efficiently. This capability enables organizations to make better decisions. The technology continues to evolve rapidly."
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Human: "Machine learning processes massive datasets fast. That's the core capability. Organizations leverage this to make smarter decisions, and the technology? It keeps evolving at breakneck speed."
- Remove AI Tell-Tale Words and Phrases
AI models overuse specific words that humans rarely employ. See references/ai-tells.md for comprehensive list.
Common offenders to reduce/remove:
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Overused: delve, tapestry, camaraderie, palpable, intricate, unease, robust, crucial, vital, realm, landscape (metaphorical)
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Filler transitions: Moreover, Furthermore, Additionally, In addition, Thus, Hence, Therefore (use sparingly)
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Overly formal: Utilize (use "use"), Commence (use "start"), Facilitate (use "help")
Replace with:
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Natural connectors: And, But, So, Plus, Also, Besides
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Casual transitions: Anyway, Basically, Essentially, Look
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Concrete verbs: Make, do, fix, build, create, help
- Add Contractions and Informal Language
AI defaults to formal constructions. Humans use contractions freely in most contexts except highly formal academic/legal writing.
Apply liberally:
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Don't, can't, won't, it's, I'm, we're, they're, you're
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Wanna, gonna (in very casual contexts only)
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Colloquialisms appropriate to context
BUT avoid in:
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Academic research papers
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Legal documents
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Formal business proposals
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When user specifically requests formal tone
- Vary Sentence Structure
AI overuses certain grammatical patterns. Humans naturally vary structure.
AI overuses:
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Present participial clauses: "Walking down the street, seeing the crowd..." (use 50% less)
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Nominalizations: "implementation" → "implementing," "utilization" → "using"
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Agentless passive voice
Add more:
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Simple active voice: "The team built it" not "It was built by the team"
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Questions mid-paragraph: "But does that really work?"
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Direct address: "You know what I mean?"
- Inject Personal Voice and Imperfection
Humans think aloud, hesitate, correct themselves, and show personality.
Add strategically:
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Hedge words: kind of, sort of, pretty much, a bit, somewhat (don't overdo)
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Thinking markers: I think, I feel, seems like, looks like
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Self-correction: "Well, actually..." "Or rather..." "I mean..."
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Qualifiers: mostly, often, usually, typically
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Minor redundancy: "completely finished," "end result"
Example:
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AI: "The solution effectively addresses the problem."
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Human: "This solution pretty much solves the problem, though there's probably room for improvement."
- Use Natural Collocations and Idioms
AI sometimes creates unnatural word pairings. Humans use familiar phrases.
Check for natural pairings:
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Make the bed (not do the bed)
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Do the dishes (not make the dishes)
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Strong coffee (not powerful coffee)
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Heavy rain (not strong rain)
Add appropriate idioms:
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"Hit the ground running"
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"Cut to the chase"
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"Get the ball rolling"
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Context-appropriate only - don't force them
- Create Contextual Depth
Humans draw from experience and add specific details. AI stays generic.
Add when appropriate:
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Specific examples instead of generalizations
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Real-world references (but avoid fabricating facts)
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Analogies and comparisons
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Personal observations or hedged experiences
Example:
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AI: "Many people enjoy coffee in the morning."
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Human: "Most people I know can't function without coffee before 9am. Myself included."
Progressive Application
For different output requirements:
Light humanization (professional contexts):
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Apply sentence variation
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Add occasional contractions
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Remove most AI-tells
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Keep sophisticated vocabulary
Medium humanization (blog posts, emails):
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Full sentence variation including fragments
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Generous contractions
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Natural transitions
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Some personal voice
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Occasional idioms
Heavy humanization (casual writing, personal essays):
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Maximum variation including very short sentences
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Frequent contractions
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Personal anecdotes and voice
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Hedge words and thinking markers
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Colloquialisms and idioms
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Self-correction patterns
Important Considerations
Preserve:
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Original meaning and key arguments
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Factual accuracy
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Technical terms when necessary
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Core structure and organization
Context awareness:
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Academic writing: lighter touch, keep sophistication, minimal contractions
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Professional emails: medium touch, maintain clarity and professionalism
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Blog posts/casual content: heavier touch, maximize personality
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TEFL assignments: medium-heavy touch, show natural teacher voice
Quality checks:
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Read aloud - does it sound like someone talking?
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Check sentence length variation visually
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Verify no more than 2-3 consecutive sentences start the same way
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Ensure personality without sacrificing clarity
Reference Files
For detailed guidance:
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references/ai-tells.md
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Comprehensive list of AI overused words/phrases
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references/linguistic-patterns.md
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Research-based differences between AI and human writing
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references/examples.md
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Before/after transformation examples across contexts
Quick Self-Check
After transformation, verify:
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Sentence lengths vary dramatically (some under 8 words, some over 20)
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At least 3-5 contractions per 200 words (unless formal context)
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No "delve," "tapestry," "robust" or similar AI-tells
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At least one sentence fragment or very short sentence per paragraph
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Natural transitions (And, But, So) outnumber formal ones
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Reads naturally when spoken aloud
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Includes at least one thinking marker or hedge word per 150 words