Rewrite a clunky paragraph into smooth, natural English — better flow, varied rhythm, same meaning. Free, no signup. Changed words are highlighted.
Paste a paragraph — up to 750 words — and click Rewrite Paragraph. The rewritten version appears with every changed word highlighted, so you can check it against your original at a glance. Paragraph breaks are preserved if you paste more than one. Your text is processed and returned — never stored.
A sentence rewrite fixes wording. A paragraph rewrite fixes flow — the problems you can only see across several sentences:
Facts, names, numbers, and the point of the paragraph stay exactly as they were.
English paragraphs lead with the point: the first sentence says what the paragraph claims, and the rest supports it. Many languages build the opposite way — context first, conclusion last — and paragraphs carried over from that habit read like they're burying the lede. If your main point sits in the final sentence, move it up front.
One paragraph, one idea. And if the rewrite comes back noticeably shorter, that's normal: natural English is more compact than careful second-language English — see the ESL patterns natives never use.
Limato's Chrome extension rewrites text inline on any website — Gmail, Slack, LinkedIn, Notion. Highlight, rewrite, paste back. 20 free rewrites a day.
Add to Chrome — FreeYes. Rewrites on this page are free with a daily limit, no signup. The Limato Chrome extension gives 5 free rewrites a day without sign-in, or 20 a day with a free Google sign-in.
Natural English is more compact than careful second-language writing. The rewrite cuts hedging, filler openers, and sentences that repeat the previous one — the meaning and facts stay, the padding goes.
Yes, up to 750 words, and paragraph breaks are preserved. For best control, work one paragraph at a time so you can judge each rewrite on its own.
Yes. Names, numbers, dates, and claims stay exactly as written — only the structure, rhythm, and wording change. Every changed word is highlighted for review.
Humanizer if the paragraph came out of ChatGPT or another AI and needs the AI tells removed. Paragraph rewriter if you wrote it yourself and it just doesn't flow. Both run on the same engine, tuned for natural output.
No. Text is sent to the rewrite API, processed, and returned — not stored, logged, or used to train models.