![]() ![]() ![]() Hilde van Zeeland is Chief Applied Linguist at Writefull. While Grammarly cannot be used in Overleaf, the Writefull for Overleaf extension gives language feedback within your Overleaf LaTeX source, even around the LaTeX syntax. ![]() The Sentence Palette, Language Search, Title Generator, and Paraphraser all use AI and big data to speed up the research writing process. However, Writefull offers a set of other features too. As Writefull does not use rules but AI-driven models only, its feedback is more flexible.īoth Grammarly and Writefull offer automated language feedback on your text. The downside is that they don’t fix all errors, and fail to perform in long, complex, or broken sentences. As Writefull's language models have been trained on published papers, they give feedback tailored to academic writing, and are familiar with technical, discipline-specific terms. The good thing about rules is that they are predictable. Grammarly focuses on fixing general English, such as emails. Rules are built to find and replace common errors, like 'researches are > research is'. Grammarly relies, to a large extent, on grammar rules. As Writefull’s language models have been trained on published papers, they give feedback tailored to academic writing, and are familiar with technical, discipline-specific terms. Grammarly focuses on fixing general English, such as emails. This has been confirmed by six ( !) independent analyses carried out by publishers and copy-editing companies over the last year. Writefull outperforms Grammarly (its academic ‘mode’ included), in both the number and accuracy of the language suggestions offered. So how do they compare? We give you five key differences. Both Writefull and Grammarly are language checking tools, and both are popular among students and researchers. Let’s be honest: we get this question quite a lot. ![]()
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