
There’s also a short explainer video that covers why AI writing “sounds AI”:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwBsVbHslZo&t=14s
1. Break the “perfect” sentence rhythm
AI loves predictable patterns: medium length → transition → medium length → transition.
I usually shuffle sentence lengths like:
- long
- short
- medium
- fragment if it fits
Just that alone makes the text feel way more natural.
2. Add small personal asides
I don’t mean crazy storytelling, just tiny human moments:
- “Honestly,”
- “surprisingly,”
- “for some reason,”
- “the part that annoyed me was…”
These micro-signals help break the robotic tone.
3. Fix transitions manually
AI transitions always sound the same: “Additionally,” “Moreover,” “In conclusion,” etc.
I replace them with:
- “Plus,”
- “On top of that,”
- “The weird thing is…”
- or no transition at all
It instantly sounds less generated.
4. Use an AI tool only as an editor, not a writer
I’ve tested a few this semester. Some tools make writing more detectable because they smooth everything too much.
Grubby AI was one of the few that didn’t change my meaning or erase my voice when I used it only for cleanup. I still edit everything afterward myself, but it helped fix awkward phrasing without making it “too perfect.”
5. Add structure the way humans actually do
Instead of letting AI write perfectly parallel bullet points or flawless topic sentences, I tweak things slightly:
- combine two ideas
- add something that doesn’t fit the pattern
- include a quick example from personal experience
Humans are structured, but not that structured.
Bonus tip
Reading your writing out loud makes robotic phrasing painfully obvious, you’ll hear instantly where something sounds “AI.”
