Writing Tool

Paraphrase Tool

Rewrite your text in different tones while preserving the original meaning. Perfect for avoiding plagiarism and improving readability.

Enter Text to Paraphrase

Paste your text and select a tone for the rewritten version.

0 / 500 words0 characters0 sentences

How to Paraphrase Text

1

Enter Your Text

Paste the text you want to paraphrase. Minimum 10 characters required. The tool works best with complete sentences and paragraphs.

2

Select Tone

Choose from formal (professional, academic), casual (conversational), academic (scholarly), or creative (expressive, engaging) tones to match your intended audience.

3

Review Paraphrased Text

Review the paraphrased version with highlighted changes. The tool maintains the original meaning while using different word choices and sentence structures.

Use Cases for Paraphrasing Tool

Academic Writing

Paraphrase research sources while maintaining academic integrity. Avoid plagiarism by rewriting quotes and references in your own words.

Content Marketing

Rewrite existing content for different platforms and audiences. Adapt tone and style for social media, blog posts, and marketing materials.

Business Communication

Adapt messages for different audiences. Rewrite formal emails into casual ones, or make technical content more accessible.

Language Learning

Practice rewriting sentences and paragraphs. Improve vocabulary and sentence structure by seeing alternative phrasings of the same ideas.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does paraphrasing maintain the original meaning?

Yes, our paraphrasing tool is designed to preserve the original meaning and key information while using different words and sentence structures. It focuses on rewording rather than changing the core message.

What tones are available?

You can choose from four tones: Formal (professional, business), Casual (conversational, friendly), Academic (scholarly, research-oriented), and Creative (expressive, engaging). Each tone adjusts vocabulary and sentence structure accordingly.

Is paraphrased content plagiarism-free?

Paraphrasing changes the wording and structure, but you should still cite original sources in academic work. The tool helps you avoid direct copying, but proper attribution is still required for quoted ideas and concepts.

Can I paraphrase long documents?

Yes, the tool can handle texts up to 500 words for free users and 5000 words for Pro users. For very long documents, consider breaking them into sections and paraphrasing each part separately.

How does it compare to simple synonym replacement?

Unlike basic synonym tools, our paraphrasing tool restructures entire sentences, adjusts grammar, and considers context to create natural-sounding rewrites that maintain flow and readability.

Usage Examples

Example 1: Academic Paraphrasing (Formal Tone)

Original:

"Climate change is causing significant environmental damage worldwide."

Paraphrased (Formal):

"Global environmental degradation is being substantially influenced by climate change."

Example 2: Casual Paraphrasing

Original:

"The meeting has been postponed until next week due to scheduling conflicts."

Paraphrased (Casual):

"We're pushing the meeting back to next week because everyone's schedules are all over the place."

Example 3: Creative Paraphrasing

Original:

"The sunset painted the sky in vibrant colors."

Paraphrased (Creative):

"Evening light splashed across the horizon, transforming the heavens into a brilliant canvas of color."

Best Practices for Paraphrasing

Choose the Right Tone

Match the tone to your audience and purpose. Use formal tone for academic papers and business documents, casual for blog posts and social media, and academic for research writing. The tone affects word choice and sentence structure.

Preserve Core Meaning

Always review paraphrased text to ensure the original meaning is maintained. While wording changes, key facts, statistics, and main ideas should remain accurate and unchanged.

Use Complete Sentences

Provide full sentences and paragraphs rather than fragments. Complete context helps the tool understand relationships between ideas and produce more natural paraphrasing.

Still Cite Sources

Paraphrasing doesn't eliminate the need for citations. Even when you reword someone else's ideas, you must still credit the original source in academic and professional writing.

Review for Natural Flow

After paraphrasing, read the text aloud to check for natural flow and readability. Make manual adjustments if needed to ensure the text sounds natural and maintains your personal writing style.

Paraphrase in Sections

For long documents, paraphrase in smaller sections (paragraphs or groups of paragraphs). This ensures better quality and allows you to maintain consistency throughout the document.