How do you guys make your arguments sound so smooth without sounding like a robot? 🦾

Erica

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Mar 31, 2026
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Seriously! I read my drafts out loud, and it's like… beep-boop, here is a fact. Beep-boop, here is another fact. There's no flow.

My friend uses these tiny transition words—however, consequently, notwithstanding—and it's like magic. ✨ But when I try, it feels forced.

I was working on a paper about urban planning, and I had this block of text about green spaces. I threw in a "on the flip side" about the cost, and suddenly, it clicked! It was a conversation, not a lecture.

But then I overdo it. My last draft had a "meanwhile" in every other sentence. My tutor just circled them all and wrote, "Variety is key." 🙃

So now I'm trying a mix: short punchy sentences, longer explanatory ones, and those little connector words like breadcrumbs.

It's exhausting but worth it when it reads like a human wrote it. A very smart, slightly anxious human. 🙋‍♀️
 
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The "beep-boop" phase is real. Here's the fix: vary your sentence openings.

If every sentence starts with "The," "This," or "It," you sound like a robot.

Start with a dependent clause. "Although green spaces reduce heat, they require maintenance."
Start with a question. "What about the cost?"
Start with an adverb. "Surprisingly, the data showed..."

Five different openings in one paragraph = human. Same opening five times = robot. Mix it up.
 
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