Writing tool

Polish the draft without losing your voice.

Best used when the structure is already right and the draft just needs to read more clearly.

Grammar should be the finishing step, not the thinking step. Use it after you already know what you are trying to say.

Your argument is fine but the sentence-level writing is messy.

You want to clean up notes before turning them into a paragraph.

You need a faster final pass before submission.

Public preview
0 / 2,000 charactersOne anonymous preview, then continue in the studio.

Example

How students use this

Example input

Macbeths ambition make him confuse power with security, and this turn him into a person who cant stop escalating.

Example output

Macbeth’s ambition makes him confuse power with security, and that confusion turns him into someone who cannot stop escalating.

Use cases

Best times to open it

Fix a rough paragraph before class submission.

Clean punctuation and sentence flow in study sheets.

Tighten bullet points before drafting from them.

FAQ

Questions students ask before using it

Is this for whole essays?

It works best on a paragraph-sized block or a short set of notes. Use the studio if you want to move through the full reading-to-writing flow.

What is the best next step after grammar?

Usually you are done. If the draft still lacks substance, go back to paragraph, outline, or thesis instead of polishing further.